Lsc and hsc signatures for predicting survival of patients having hematological cancer

ABSTRACT

A method for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising: a) determining an expression profile by measuring the gene expression levels of a set of genes selected from a leukemic stem cell (LSC) gene signature marker set or an hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene signature marker set, in a sample from a subject; and b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on the expression profile; wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

RELATED APPLICATIONS

This is a Patent Cooperation Treaty Application which claims the benefit of 35 U.S.C. 119 based on the priority of corresponding U.S. Provisional Patent Application No. 61/266,704 filed Dec. 4, 2009, which is incorporated herein in its entirety.

FIELD OF THE DISCLOSURE

The disclosure pertains to methods and compositions for determining gene expression signatures for predicting survival in patients having a hematological malignancy and particularly leukemia patients such as AML patients.

BACKGROUND OF THE DISCLOSURE

Acute myeloid leukemia (AML) is a clonal disease, marked by the growth of abnormally differentiated immature myeloid cells, with a long term survival rate in adult patients of only 30%^(1, 2). The first explicit experimental evidence for the existence of leukemic stem cells (LSC), the only cell capable of initiating and sustaining the leukemic clonal disease, has been demonstrated³. Leukemia stem cells (LSCs) are a biologically distinct blast population positioned at the apex of the acute myeloid leukemia (AML) developmental hierarchy. A more complete understanding of the unique properties of LSCs is crucial for the identification of novel AML regulatory pathways and the subsequent development of innovative therapies that effectively target these cells in leukemia patients. Typically, studies overlook the heterogeneity of AML and the existence of LSC, potentially masking important molecular pathways.

While the cancer stem cell model was proposed over three decades ago, only recently has experimental evidence confirmed the hierarchical model for leukemia³. Using a quantitative assay for transplantation of primary AML into SCID or NOD/SCID mice, human AML cells that can initiate a human leukemic graft in mice (termed SCID Leukemia-Initiating Cells—SL-IC) were identified and prospectively purified³. The cells presenting with surface markers CD34⁺CD38⁻, representing from 0.1-1% of the AML cell population, were the only AML fraction capable of serially transplanting the leukemia. Additionally, this fraction could recapitulate the cellular diversity of the original leukemia, and therefore contained the LSC. The CD34⁺CD38⁺ fraction contained progenitor cells (cells capable of forming colonies but with limited self-renewal ability) while the other two fractions contain blast cells with no self-renewal capacity. Several groups have since used the NOD/SCID xenotransplant model to isolate rare cancer stem cell (CSC) in, for example, brain and breast tumours, indicating that the CSC model applies to multiple types of cancer⁴⁻⁶.

Since AML samples are more variable than normal hematopoietic cells it is essential to validate each sorted fraction. Incorrectly labeling a sorted AML fraction would severely compromise the ability to properly analyze the global gene expression data. Currently, the in vivo transplantation assay is the best technique to accurately detect LSCs. In vitro methods suffer from the alteration of marker expression and the inability to maintain LSC in culture. Importantly, a novel and improved in vivo SCID leukemia initiating cell assay to confirm the presence of LSC activity in each sorted fraction of 16 AML involving intrafemoral injection into NOD/SCID mice depleted of CD122 cells has been applied. With this assay, LSC were detected in the expected CD34+/CD38− population of sorted AML. However, in the majority of AML samples, LSC were detected in at least one additional fraction, demonstrating the critical importance of functional validation when interpreting global gene expression profiles of sorted stem cell populations¹⁹.

Significantly, while it is expected that HSC and LSC share similar regulatory pathways, a recent finding has highlighted differences between HSC and LSC regulatory networks^(7, 8). Deletion of the tumour suppressor gene Pten in murine hematopoietic cells resulted in the generation of transplantable leukemias. However, Pten deletion in HSCs lead to HSC depletion, indicating that, unlike LSCs, HSCs could not be maintained without Pten. Regulatory differences between HSC and LSC represent a vulnerability that can be used to specifically target LSCs for eradication, leaving HSCs unharmed. Greater understanding of both LSC and HSC regulation may reveal further differences between LSC and HSC control and lead to novel therapies.

Little is currently known of the expression profile of LSC enriched sub-populations in AML. Gal et al. examined the expression of CD34+/CD38− vs CD34+/CD38+ populations in 5 AML and identified 409 genes that are 2-fold over or under expressed between the cell populations⁹. However, the different cell populations were not functionally validated, and it is likely that the CD34+/CD38+ fractions also contain LSC, therefore the gene profile is cell marker dependent, not functionally dependent. Additionally, Majeti et al. identified 3005 differentially expressed genes in a comparison between AML CD34+/CD38− cells and normal bone marrow CD34+/CD38− cells. However, the analysis did not include mature cell populations, suggesting that the profile is a leukemia specific profile, not necessarily a stem cell profile¹⁰. The prognostic significance of these profiles was not explored.

AML is a genetically heterogeneous disease, with the karyotype of the AML blast as the most important prognostic factor^(11, 12). However, approximately half of all adult AML are cytogenetically normal at diagnosis. Within the cytogenetically normal AML (CN-AML) patient population, the mutational status of genes such as FLT3, NPM1, MN1 and CEBPA are associated with outcome; however, the association is not absolute and not all CN-AML present with such mutations, indicating that this class of AML is heterogeneous and additional factors are prognostically significant^(13, 14). Two groups have attempted to use gene expression profiling to predict outcome specifically in CN-AML patients. Bullinger et al. developed a signature that was validated by Radmacher et al., where there was a correlation with overall survival (p=0.001) of an classification rule developed using the previously identified signature^(15, 16). Metzeler et al. used an cohort of 163 CN-AML to develop an 86 probe signature that predicts survival in CN-AML, with a significant prediction of overall survival in an independent set of 79 CN-AML (p=0.002)¹⁷. There was a correlation with FLT3ITD status for these signatures; however, the 86 probe signature maintained association with outcome, independent of FLT3ITD status, indicating that gene expression profiling can be of value for predicting prognosis, in addition to mutational status.

SUMMARY OF THE DISCLOSURE

A method for determining a prognosis of a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

a) determining a gene expression level for each of a set of genes selected from leukemia stem cell (LSC) signature genes listed in Tables 2, 6, and/or 12, hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) signature genes listed in Tables 4 and/or 14, and/or CE-HSC/LSC signature genes listed in Table 19, to obtain a subject expression profile of a sample obtained from the subject; and

b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on the subject expression profile;

wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

A computer-implemented method for determining a prognosis of a subject having a hematological cancer comprising: obtaining a subject expression profile and classifying, on a computer, the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on the subject expression profile comprising measurements of expression levels of a set of genes in a sample from the subject, wherein the set of genes is selected from genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and 14, comprises at least 2 genes; wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis, and wherein a poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

A method for monitoring a response to a cancer treatment in a subject having a hematological cancer, comprising:

a) collecting a first sample from the subject before the subject has received the cancer treatment;

b) collecting a subsequent sample from the subject after the subject has received the cancer treatment;

c) determining the gene expression levels of a set of genes selected from LSC signature genes and/or HSC signature genes in the first and the subsequent samples according to a method described herein, to obtain a first sample subject expression profile and a subsequent sample subject expression profile, wherein the set of genes comprises at least 2 genes; and

d) calculating a first sample subject expression profile score and a subsequent sample subject expression profile score;

wherein a lower subsequent sample expression profile score compared to the first sample expression profile score is indicative of a positive response, and a higher subsequent sample expression profile score compared to the first expression profile score is indicative of a negative response.

A method of treating a subject having a hematological cancer, comprising determining a prognosis of the subject according to a method described herein, and providing a suitable cancer treatment to the subject in need thereof according to the prognosis determined.

Use of a prognosis determined according to a method described herein, and identifying a suitable treatment for treating a subject with a hematological cancer.

A composition comprising a set of nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from SEQ ID NO:1-2533.

An array comprising for each gene in a set of genes, the set of genes comprising at least 2 of the genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14, one or more polynucleotide probes complementary and hybridizable to a coding sequence in the gene, for determining a prognosis according to a method described herein.

A kit for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer according to the method described herein comprising:

a) an array or composition described herein;

b) a kit control; and

c) optionally instructions for use.

A computer system comprising:

a) a database including records comprising reference expression profiles associated with clinical outcomes, each reference profile comprising the expression levels of a set of genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14;

b) a user interface capable of receiving and/or inputting a selection of gene expression levels of a set of genes, the set comprising at least 2 genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14 for use in comparing to the gene reference expression profiles in the database;

c) an output that displays a prediction of clinical prognosis according to the expression levels of the set of genes.

In an embodiment, the expression profile is used to calculate an subject risk score, wherein the subject is classified has having a good prognosis if the subject risk score is low and as having a poor prognosis if the expression profile is high.

Other features and advantages of the present disclosure will become apparent from the following detailed description. It should be understood, however, that the detailed description and the specific examples while indicating preferred embodiments of the disclosure are given by way of illustration only, since various changes and modifications within the spirit and scope of the disclosure will become apparent to those skilled in the art from this detailed description.

BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE DRAWINGS

FIG. 1A Experimental Design: Sixteen AML patient samples were sorted into 4 subpopulations based upon CD34 and CD38 antibody staining and cells recovered for functional and gene expression analysis. Functional validation of the presence of SCID Leukemia Initiating Cells (SL-IC) was undertaken for each fraction of 16 of the AML samples. SL-IC is a functional readout of LSC—only LSC are known to generate long term leukemic grafts in mice. Functional validation was successful for at least 1 fraction for each of 16 AML. Generally, CD34+ and CD38− and approximately 60% of CD34+/CD38+ fractions contained SL-IC. RNA was extracted from each fraction and global gene expression was measured using Affymetrix microarrays. The mRNA expression between fractions containing SL-IC and fractions that did not contain SL-IC was compared and each mRNA probe was ranked according to correlation with SL-IC. Publicly available data for gene expression and overall survival of 160 AML was used to measure prognostic significance of the top 25 LSC probe sets that positively correlated with SL-IC¹⁷.

FIG. 1B Correlation of the 25 LSC Probe Signature with Overall Survival in CN-AML: Publicly available overall survival and expression data was analyzed¹⁷. In short, the expression of each probe set was scaled to 0 across the 160 AML patient bone marrow samples using the median value. The expression of the 25 probe sets was summed for each of the 160 bone marrow AML samples (expression score). This expression score was used to divide the 160 AML patient group into two equal sized populations of 80 patients based upon above (high expression score) or below (low expression score) median expression score of the 25 LSC probe set. The overall survival of the two groups was examined using a Kaplan-Meier plot and log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test. The 25 LSC probe set signature separated the AML patients into 2 populations with distinct outcomes (poor and good survival). The AML patients with a high expression score using the 25 LSC probe set signature had lower overall survival than the AML patients with low expression (p=0.0001; median survival of 236 days vs 999 days; hazard ratio of 2.641 with a 95% Cl of 1.763 to 3.957, computed using the Mantel-Haenszel method).

FIG. 2A Experimental Design: Three pooled cord blood samples were sorted into 3 subpopulations based upon CD34 and CD38 antibody staining and cells recovered for functional and gene expression analysis. Two cell fractions enriched for HSC, Lin-CD34+CD38− (HSC-1) and Lin-CD34+CD38lowCD36− (HSC-2), and one population enriched for progenitors, Lin-CD34+CD38+ (containing all multilineage and unilineage progenitors), were obtained. Whole CB from each pooled sample set was used as a mature cell fraction. To identify a set of genes associated with the HSC subsets, a Student's ANOVA (analysis of variance) test was performed. To reduce the incidence of false positives to <1%, Benjamini and Hochberg False Discovery Rate (FDR) was applied to the analysis. Tukey Post Hoc testing revealed that 19 differentially expressed probe sets that were over-expressed in HSC-1 compared to the other 3 groups, and 28 probe sets that were over-expressed in HSC-1 and HSC-2 compared to the other 2 groups. These probe sets were combined and duplicates removed to generate a 43 HSC probe set signature. Publicly available data for gene expression and overall survival of 160 AML was used to measure prognostic significance of this 43 HSC probe set signature¹⁷.

FIG. 2B Correlation of 43 HSC Probes Signature with Overall Survival in CN-AML: Same approach as described in FIG. 1B. The AML patients with high expression of the 43 HSC probe set signature in their bone marrow cells had lower overall survival than the AML patients with low expression (p,0.0001; median survival of 233 days vs 999 days; hazard ratio of 2.680 with a 95% Cl of 1.782 to 4.030, computed using the Mantel-Haenszel method).

FIG. 3 Example of AML Cell Sorting: Fifty three million low density peripheral blood cells from AML sample 8227 were stained with CD34 and CD38 antibodies and sorted with a BD FACSAria (Becton-Dickinson). Sorting gates were set wide to minimize contamination from other fractions. Fractionated cells were captured in 100% FCS and recovered by centrifugation. As a result, the AML patient sample was sorted into 4 subpopulations based upon CD34 and CD38 antibody staining and cells recovered for functional and gene expression analysis, including injection into the right femur of mice in the SL-IC xenotransplant assay.

FIG. 4 Example of Engraftment: Ten weeks post injection of 50,000 CD34+/CD38+ cells from AML sample 8227, the mouse was euthanized by cervical dislocation and hind leg bones removed and flushed with media to recover engrafted cells. (A) Percent human AML engraftment was assessed by flow cytometry for human CD45+ staining cells. (B) Myeloid cell marker positivity (CD33) was used to indicate that human cells are AML.

FIG. 5 Strategy of transcriptional profiling of functionally determined stem cell fractions. (A) Overview of experimental design. Cells were sorted on CD34/CD38, with representative sort gates shown for AML and cord blood. Functional validation of sorted fractions was performed in vivo and combined with gene expression profiling to generate stem cell related gene expression profiles. (B) The surface marker profiles of AML are variable. Shown are the CD34/CD38 marker profiles for 16 AML that were sorted into 4 populations and assayed for LSC.

FIG. 6 Correlation between the LSC-R and HSC-R. (A) GSEA plot showing the enrichment of the HSC-R gene signature (top) and common lineage-committed progenitor gene signature (bottom) in LSC vs non-LSC gene expression profile. (B) Heat map of the HSC-R GSEA plot from 2A (top panel) showing the core enriched HSC-R genes in the LSC expression profile (CE-HSC/LSC).

FIG. 7 The LSC-R and HSC-R gene signatures correlate with the disease outcome. 160 unsorted cytogenetically normal AML samples were divided into two populations of 80 AML by expression of the stem cell gene signatures. (A) Correlation of the LSC-R and HSC-R signatures and overall survival. The * line represent patients whose AML expressed the LSC-R (left panel) or HSC-R (right panel) signatures above the median while the ** line represent those who expressed the respective stem cell signature below the median. ‘HR’ is hazard ratio. (B) Event free survival of patients stratified by expression of the LSC-R and HSC-R, as in (A). (C) The correlation between the LSC-R signature and overall survival is not based upon a single or few genes. The y axis is the log-rank p-value of each combination of probes. The x axis is the number of probes included in the analysis, starting with the top ranked probe positively correlated with LSC followed by the addition of each next ranked probe in the LSC-R gene profile (as determined by Z-score in the LSC vs non-LSC t-test). Therefore the first point on the x axis represents the p-value of the correlation with overall survival of the top ranked LSC probe. The second point is the p-value of the combination of the top two ranked LSC-R probes. (D) An AML signature based upon phenotypic markers (CD34+/CD38− ‘stem cell’ vs CD34+/CD38+‘progenitor’) does not correlate with overall survival. The * line represent patients whose AML expressed the CD34+/CD38− gene list above the median while the ** line represent those who expressed the stem cell signature below the median.

FIG. 8 Multivariate correlation of LSC, HSC gene expression signatures and molecular risk status with overall survival in a cohort of 160 cytogenetically normal AML. Overall survival curves of 160 CN-AML divided by expression of the LSC-R (A) or HSC-R (B) signatures and molecular risk with multivariate analysis of prognostic factors below. Low molecular risk group (LMR) include NPM1mut/FLT3wt CN AML; high molecular risk (HMR) include NPM1wt or FLT3ITD positive CN AML.

FIG. 9 LSC from each AML engraft mice with similar kinetics, regardless of LSC marker profile. (A) Engraftment of AML #2, derived from LSC with different CD34/CD38 marker profiles, as detected by human CD45+CD33+ chimerism 7.5-11 weeks after injection of sorted cells. (B) Engraftment of AML #5, derived from LSC with different CD34/CD38 marker profiles, as detected by human CD45+CD33+ chimerism 8-10.5 weeks after injection of sorted cells.

FIG. 10 Representative AML sample—primary and post xenograft transplantation. (A) Differentiation marker profile for primary patient AML sample 5. (B) Sorting scheme for AML sample 5 into 4 populations based upon CD34 and CD38. (C) Both CD34+/CD38+ and CD34+/CD38− cells engrafted mice, as measured by human CD45. In each case, the differentiation marker profile is identical between chimaeric cells derived from either CD34+/CD38+ or CD34+/CD38− cells injected into mice.

FIG. 11 Properties of sorted cord blood fractions. (A) Two cell fractions enriched for HSC and one population enriched for progenitors were isolated by FACS-sorting. (B) Biological assessment of FACS-sorted cells by in vitro CFC assay with myeloid (white columns) and erythroid (black columns) colonies. (C) In vivo SRC repopulating assay. Column colour denotes cell type (black—erythroid cells, white—non-erythroid) in bone marrow of right femur (R—injected femur), left femur (L) and tibias (T).

FIG. 12 Validation of differential gene expression of 19 genes included in the HSC-R gene signature. qRT-PCR was performed on 3 populations used in the development of the HSC-R signature, including two stem cell enriched populations and one progenitor enriched population: CD34+CD38-lin− cells (HSC1), CD34+CD38loCD36-lin− (HSC2), and CD34+CD38+ (progenitor). Gene expression was normalized to that of GAPDH.

FIG. 13 Correlation between the LSC-R signature and HSC gene expression data. (A) GSEA plot showing the enrichment of the LSC-R gene signature in the HSC-R gene expression profile, comparing HSC and non-HSC. (B) Heat map of the GSEA plot showing the core enriched LSC genes in the HSC expression profile as described for (A). The populations are HSC(HSC1 and HSC2), lineage-committed progenitor (Prog) and lineage+ cells (Lin+).

FIG. 14 LSC and HSC gene expression signatures correlate with poor risk AML patients. GSEA plots showing the enrichment of (A) LSC-R FDR0.10 gene signature and (B) HSC-R FDR0.05 gene signature in 110 AML split into poor and good cytogenetic risk status. The leading edge genes are listed below. Twenty-one of the 32 leading edge HSC-R genes are enriched in LSC cell fractions and are included in the CE-HSC/LSC gene list (FIG. 2A).

FIG. 15 Correlation of LSC, HSC gene expression signatures and FLT3 status with overall survival in a cohort of 160 cytogenetically normal AML. Overall survival curves of 160 CN-AML divided by expression of the LSC-R (left panel) or HSC-R (right panel) signatures and FLT3ITD status. Multivariate analysis of prognostic factors is shown below.

FIG. 16 Schematic showing a computer system.

FIG. 17 Survival graph for expression levels of 2 LSC genes CLN5 AND NF1 showing they are significantly correlated with overall survival in the 160 AML cohort (214252_s_at and 212676_at respectively). The p value is 0.0293 and the hazard ratio is 1.53.

DETAILED DESCRIPTION OF THE DISCLOSURE I. Definitions

As used herein, “Leukemia stem cell (LSC) signature genes” or “leukemic stem cell (LSC) signature genes includes genes listed in Tables 2, 6, and/or 12 and genes detectable by the probesets listed in Tables 1, 5 and/or 18 which are preferentially expressed in leukemic stem cells functionally defined.

As used herein, “LSC signature probe sets” as used herein refers to probesets listed for example in Tables 1, 5 and/or 18, each probeset comprising a set of probes, for example 11 probes that can be used to detect LSC signature genes.

As used herein, “Hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) signature genes” includes genes listed in Tables 4 and/or 14 and genes detectable by the probesets listed in Tables 3 and/or 17, which are preferentially expressed in hematopoietic stem cells functionally defined. Also included is the subset of HSC signature genes included in Table 20.

As used herein, “HSC signature probe sets” as used herein refers to the probesets listed for example in Tables 3 and/or 17, each probeset comprising a set of probes, for example 11 probes that can be used to detect HSC signature genes.

As used herein “core enriched HSC/LSC(CE-HSC/LSC) signature genes” refers to a subset of 44 HSC signature genes that are more highly expressed in LSC containing fractions (compared to non-LSC leukemic cells) and which are listed in Table 13 or Table 19, and which can for example detected using the corresponding probes and probesets listed for example in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18. These forty-four leading edge genes drive the GSEA enrichment of the HSC-R signature in the LSC gene expression data and represent HSC genes that are also differentially expressed in LSC.

As used herein “expression profile” refers to expression levels for a set of genes selected from LSC signature genes and/or HSC signature genes including for example CE-HSC/LSC signature genes. For example, an expression profile can comprise the quantitated relative expression levels of at least 2 or more genes listed in Table 2, 4 6, 12, 13, 14, 19 and/or 20 and/or genes detected by probes and probesets listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18.

A “subject expression profile” refers to the expression levels in (or corresponding to) a sample obtained from a subject. The gene expression levels can for example be used to prognose a clinical outcome based on similarity to a reference expression profile known to be associated with a particular outcome or used to calculate a subject risk score for comparison to a selected threshold.

The term “subject risk score” as used herein refers to a sum of the expression values of a set of genes selected from LSC signature genes and/or HSC signature genes (e.g. for example CE-HSC/LSC signature genes), which can be used to classify a subject. A subject risk score can be calculated for example by scaling (e.g. normalizing) each gene expression value detected for example with a probe or probeset, summing the expression values to obtain a risk score which can be compared to a reference value or standard (e.g. a threshold derived from subjects with a known outcome), where a subject risk score above the threshold predicts poor prognosis and below the threshold predicts good prognosis.

A “reference expression profile” or “reference profile” as used herein refers to the expression signature of a setset of genes (e.g. at least 2 genes LSC or HSC signature genes), associated with a clinical outcome in a patient having a hematological cancer such as a leukemia patient. The reference expression profile is identified using two or more reference patient expression profiles, wherein the expression profile is similar between reference patients with a similar outcome thereby defining an outcome class and is different to other reference expression profiles with a different outcome class. The reference expression profile is for example, a reference profile or reference signature of the expression of 2 or more, 3 or more, 4 or more or 5 or more genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12, 13, 14, 19 and/or 20 and/or genes detectable with probes listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18 to which the expression levels of the corresponding genes in a patient sample are compared in methods for determining or predicting clinical outcome, e.g. good prognosis or poor prognosis. Similarly, a reference expression profile associated with good prognosis can be referred to a good prognosis reference profile and a reference expression profile associated with a poor prognosis can be referred to as a poor prognosis reference profile.

The term “classifying” as used herein refers to assigning, to a class or kind, an unclassified item. A “class” or “group” then being a grouping of items, based on one or more characteristics, attributes, properties, qualities, effects, parameters, etc., which they have in common, for the purpose of classifying them according to an established system or scheme. For example, subjects having increased expression of a set of genes selected from genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12, 13, 14, 19 and/or 20 are predicted to have poor prognosis. The subject expression profile can for example be used to calculate a risk score to classify the subject, for example subjects having a summed expression value (e.g. subject risk score) above a selected threshold which can for example be the median score of a population of subjects having the same hematological cancer as the subject, can be classified as having a poor prognosis.

As used herein “prognosis” refers to an indication of the likelihood of a particular clinical outcome e.g. the resulting course of disease, for example, an indication of likelihood of survival or death due to disease within a fixed time period, and includes a “good prognosis” and a “poor prognosis”.

As used herein “outcome” or “clinical outcome” refers to the resulting course of disease and can be characterized for example by likelihood of survival or death due to disease within a fixed time period. For example a good clinical outcome includes cure, prevention of metastasis and/or survival for a fixed period of time, and a poor clinical outcome includes disease progression and/or death within a fixed period of time.

As used herein, “good prognosis” indicates that the subject is expected to survive within a set time period, for example five years of initial diagnosis of a hematological cancer such as leukemia. The set period of time varies with the disease type e.g. leukemia type and/or subtype. For example for AML, a good prognosis refers to a greater than 30%, greater than 40%, or greater than 50% chance of surviving more than 1 year, more than 2 years, more than 3 years, more than 4 years or more than 5 years after initial diagnosis. As another example, a good prognosis is used to mean an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined time compared to a median outcome, for example the median outcome of a particular AML subtype.

As used herein, “poor prognosis” indicates that the subject is expected to die due to disease within a set time period, for example five years of initial diagnosis of a hematological cancer such as leukemia. The set period of time varies with the particular disease e.g. leukemia type and/or subtype. For example for AML, a poor prognosis refers to a less than 50%, less than 40%, or less than 30% chance of surviving greater than 1 year, greater than 2 years, greater than 3 years, greater than 4 years or greater than 5 years after initial diagnosis. As another example, a poor prognosis is used to mean a decreased likelihood of survival within a predetermined time compared for example to a median outcome, for example the median outcome of the particular hematological cancer. For example, the 5 year relative survival rates overall reported form 1999 to 2005 for ALL is 66.3% (90.9% in children under 5); for CLL is 78.8%, for AML 23.4% overall (60.2% in children under 15) and for CML 53.3% (http://www.leukemia-lymphoma.org/all_page?item_id=9346#_survival).

The term a “decreased likelihood of survival”, as used herein means an increased risk of shorter survival relative to for example the median outcome for the particular cancer. For example, increased expression of two or more genes in the gene signatures described herein can be prognostic of decreased likelihood of survival. The increased risk for example may be relative or absolute and may be expressed qualitatively or quantitatively. Examples of expressions of risk include but are not limited to, odds, probability, odds ratio, p-values, attributable risk, relative frequency, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and relative risk.

The term an “increased likelihood of survival”, as used herein means an increased likelihood or risk of longer survival relative to a subject without the decreased expression levels. Examples of expressions of risk include but are not limited to, odds, probability, odds ratio, p-values, attributable risk, relative frequency, positive predictive value, negative predictive value, and relative risk.

As used herein “signature genes” refers to set of genes disclosed herein predicting clinical outcome in a hematological cancer subject and includes without limitation LSC-derived signature genes and/or HSC-derived signature genes as well as CE-HSC/LSC signature genes. For example, LSC signature genes includes the genes listed in Table 2, 6, and/or 12; HSC signature genes includes the genes listed in Table 4, 14 and/or 20 and CE-HSC/LSC signature genes includes genes listed in Tables 13 and 19. The gene sequences identified by accession number for example in Tables 2, 4, 6, 12, 13, 14 and 19 are herein incorporated by reference.

The term “expression level” of a gene as used herein refers to the measurable quantity of gene product produced by the gene in a sample of a patient wherein the gene product can be a transcriptional product or a translated transcriptional product. Accordingly the expression level can pertain to a nucleic acid gene product such as RNA or cDNA or a polypeptide. The expression level is derived from a subject/patient sample and/or a control sample, and can for example be detected de novo or correspond to a previous determination. The expression level can be determined or measured for example, using microarray methods, PCR methods, and/or antibody based methods, as is known to a person of skill in the art.

The term “determining an expression level” or “expression level is determined” as used in reference to a gene or (set of genes) means the application of an agent and/or method to a sample, for example a sample from the subject and/or a control sample, for ascertaining quantitatively, semi-quantitatively or qualitatively the amount of a gene expression product, for example the amount of polypeptide or mRNA. For example, a level of a gene expression can be determined by a number of methods including for example arrays and other hybridization based methods and/or PCR protocols where a probe or primer or primer set is used to ascertain the amount of nucleic acid of the gene. For example, an expression level of a gene can be determined using a probeset or one or more probes of the probeset, described herein for a particular gene. In addition more than one probeset where more than one exists, can be used to determine the expression level of the gene. Other examples include Nanostring® technology, serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE), RNA sequencing, RNase protection assays, and Northern Blot. The polypeptide level can be determined for example by immunoassay for example Western blot, flow cytometry, immunohistochemistry, ELISA, immunoprecipation and the like, where a gene or gene signature detection agent such as an antibody for example, a labeled antibody specifically binds the gene polypeptide product and permits for example relative or absolute ascertaining of the amount of polypeptide.

The term “hematological cancer” as used herein refers to cancers that affect blood and bone marrow, and include without limitation leukemia, lymphoma and multiple myeloma.

The term “CSC hematological cancer” as used herein refers to cancers that are sustained by a small population of stem-like, tumor-initiating cells

The term “leukemia” as used herein means any disease involving the progressive proliferation of abnormal leukocytes found in hemopoietic tissues, other organs and usually in the blood in increased numbers. For example, leukemia includes acute myeloid leukemia (AML), acute lymphocytic leukemia (ALL), chronic lymphocytic leukemia (CLL) and chronic myelogenous leukemia (CML) including cytogenetically normal and abnormal subtypes.

The term “lymphoma” as used herein means any disease involving the progressive proliferation of abnormal lymphoid cells. For example, lymphoma includes mantle cell lymphoma, Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma, and Hodgkin's lymphoma. Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma would include indolent and aggressive Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma. Aggressive Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma would include intermediate and high grade lymphoma. Indolent Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma would include low grade lymphomas.

The term “myeloma” and/or “multiple myeloma” as used herein means any tumor or cancer composed of cells derived from the hematopoietic tissues of the bone marrow. Multiple myeloma is also knows as MM and/or plasma cell myeloma.

The term “cytogenetically normal AML” or “CN-AML” as used herein means AML or an AML cell that is characterized by normal chromosome number and structure.

The term “FLT3ITD” as used herein refers to a Fms-like tyrosine kinase 3 (FLT3) molecule (e.g. gene or protein) that comprises an internal tandem duplication (ITD). FLT3 is a receptor tyrosine kinase expressed in primitive hematopoietic cells that has been implicated in the regulation of HSC. Mutation of FLT3 is a strong prognostic indicator in CN-AML associated with poor outcome.

The term “NPM1” as used herein, refers to Nucleophosmin, including for example the sequences identified in entrez gene id 4869, herein incorporated by reference.

As used herein “sample” refers to any patient sample, including but not limited to a fluid, cell or tissue sample that comprises cancer cells such as leukemia cells including blasts, which can be assayed for gene expression levels, particularly genes differentially expressed in stem cell enriched populations or non-stem cell enriched populations, either leukemic or normal. The sample includes for example a blood sample, a fractionated blood sample, a bone marrow sample, a biopsy, a frozen tissue sample, a fresh tissue specimen, a cell sample, and/or a paraffin embedded section, material from which RNA can be extracted in sufficient quantities and with adequate quality to permit measurement of relative mRNA levels, or material from which polypeptides can be extracted in sufficient quantities and with adequate quality to permit measurement of relative polypeptide levels.

The term “sequence identity” as used herein refers to the percentage of sequence identity between two or more polypeptide sequences or two or more nucleic acid sequences that have identity or a percent identity for example about 70% identity, 80% identity, 90% identity, 95% identity, 98% identity, 99% identity or higher identity or a specified region. To determine the percent identity of two or more amino acid sequences or of two or more nucleic acid sequences, the sequences are aligned for optimal comparison purposes (e.g., gaps can be introduced in the sequence of a first amino acid or nucleic acid sequence for optimal alignment with a second amino acid or nucleic acid sequence). The amino acid residues or nucleotides at corresponding amino acid positions or nucleotide positions are then compared. When a position in the first sequence is occupied by the same amino acid residue or nucleotide as the corresponding position in the second sequence, then the molecules are identical at that position. The percent identity between the two sequences is a function of the number of identical positions shared by the sequences (i.e., % identity=number of identical overlapping positions/total number of positions.times.100%). In one embodiment, the two sequences are the same length. The determination of percent identity between two sequences can also be accomplished using a mathematical algorithm. A preferred, non-limiting example of a mathematical algorithm utilized for the comparison of two sequences is the algorithm of Karlin and Altschul, 1990, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 87:2264-2268, modified as in Karlin and Altschul, 1993, Proc. Natl. Acad. Sci. U.S.A. 90:5873-5877. Such an algorithm is incorporated into the NBLAST and XBLAST programs of Altschul et al., 1990, J. Mol. Biol. 215:403. BLAST nucleotide searches can be performed with the NBLAST nucleotide program parameters set, e.g., for score=100, wordlength=12 to obtain nucleotide sequences homologous to a nucleic acid molecules of the present application. BLAST protein searches can be performed with the XBLAST program parameters set, e.g., to score-50, word_length=3 to obtain amino acid sequences homologous to a protein molecule of the present invention. To obtain gapped alignments for comparison purposes, Gapped BLAST can be utilized as described in Altschul et al., 1997, Nucleic Acids Res. 25:3389-3402. Alternatively, PSI-BLAST can be used to perform an iterated search which detects distant relationships between molecules (Id.). When utilizing BLAST, Gapped BLAST, and PSI-Blast programs, the default parameters of the respective programs (e.g., of XBLAST and NBLAST) can be used (see, e.g., the NCBI website). The percent identity between two sequences can be determined using techniques similar to those described above, with or without allowing gaps. In calculating percent identity, typically only exact matches are counted.

The term “subject” also referred to as “patient” as used herein refers to any member of the animal kingdom, preferably a human being.

The term “control” as used herein refers to a sample and/or an expression level or numerical value and/or range (e.g. control range) for a LSC or HSC signature gene or group of LSC or HSC signature genes, including for example CE-HSC/LSC signature genes, corresponding to their expression level in such a sample from a subject or a population of subjects (e.g. control subjects) who are known as not having or having a hematological cancer and a particular outcome. In another example, a level of expression in a sample from a subject is compared to a level of expression in a control, wherein the control comprises a control sample or a numerical value derived from a sample, optionally the same sample type as the sample (e.g. both the sample and the control are white blood cell containing fractions), from a subject known as not having or having hematological cancer and a particular outcome. Where the control is a numerical value or range, the numerical value or range is a predetermined value or range that corresponds to a level of the expression or range of levels of the genes in a group of subjects known as having a hematological cancer and outcome (e.g. threshold or cutoff level; or control range).

The term “non-cancer control” as used herein refers to a sample and/or expression level or numerical value corresponding to the expression level in a sample from a subject or a population of subjects (e.g. non-cancer control subjects) who are known as not having a hematological cancer. Similarly a “cancer” as used herein refers to a sample and/or expression level or numerical value corresponding to the expression level in a sample from a subject or a population of subjects (e.g. cancer control subjects) who are known as having a hematological cancer and a particular outcome, e.g. the same hematological cancer as the subject sample being tested e.g. both leukemias.

The term “difference in the level” as used herein when referring to a subject gene expression level in comparison to a control or previous sample refers to a measurable difference in the level or quantity of a LSC or HSC signature gene expression level or set of gene expression levels, compared to the control or previous sample that is of sufficient magnitude to indicate the subject is in a different class from the control and/or previous sample, for example a significant difference or a statistically significant difference. A difference in the level can for example be compared by calculating a subject risk score and comparing to a threshold that is for example statistically associated with a particular prognosis. A difference in a gene expression level can also be detected if a ratio of the level in a test sample as compared with a control (or previous sample) is greater than 1 or less than 1. For example, a ratio of greater than 1.5, 1.7, 2, 3, 3, 5, 10, 12, 15, 20 or more or a ratio less than 0.5, 0.25, 0.1, 0.05 or more

The term “measuring” or “measurement” as used herein refers to assessing the presence, absence, quantity or amount (which can be an effective amount) of either a given substance within a clinical or subject-derived sample, including the derivation of qualitative or quantitative concentration levels of such substances, or otherwise evaluating the values or categorization of a subject's clinical parameters.

The term “set” as used herein in the context of “set of genes” means one or more, optionally 2 or more, 3 or more, 4 or more or 5 or more genes. The set can for example include genes listed in Tables 2, 4 6, 12, 13, 14, 19, and/or 20 and/or genes detected by probes listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18 or a subset thereof including any number between for example 1 and 121 genes.

The term “threshold” as used herein refers to a predetermined numerical value or range that corresponds to a level of gene expression or summed levels of gene expression level or range at which a subject is more likely to have a particular clinical outcome compared to a subject with a level of gene expression or summed level of gene expression below the threshold. The threshold can be selected according to a desired level of accuracy or specificity, for example the threshold can be a median level in a population, for example subjects with AML, or an average level in a population of subjects with known outcome, e.g. poor prognosis. The threshold or threshold can correspond to an average of the highest 50%, 40%, 30%, 20% or 10% expression levels in subjects with poor outcome.

The term “kit control” as used herein means a suitable assay control useful when determining an expression level of a LSC or HSC signature gene or set of genes. For kits for detecting RNA levels for example by hybridization, the kit control can comprise an oligonucleotide control, useful for example for detecting an internal control such as GAPDH for standardizing the amount of RNA in the sample and determining relative biomarker transcript levels. The kit can control can also include RNA from a cell line which can be used as a ‘baseline’ quality control in an assay, such as an array or PCR based method.

The term “hybridize” as used herein refers to the sequence-specific non-covalent binding interaction with a complementary nucleic acid. Appropriate stringency conditions which promote hybridization are known to those skilled in the art, or can be found in Current Protocols in Molecular Biology, John Wiley & Sons, N.Y. (1989), 6.3.1 6.3.6. For example, 6.0× sodium chloride/sodium citrate (SSC) at about 45° C., followed by a wash of 2.0×SSC at 50° C. may be employed. With respect to an array, appropriate stringency conditions can be found and have been described for commercial microarrays, such as those manufactured and/or distributed by Agilent Inc, Affymetrix Inc, Roche-Nimblegen Inc. and other entities.

The term “microarray” or “array” as used herein refers to an ordered set of probes fixed to a solid surface that permits analysis such as gene analysis of a set of genes. A DNA microarray refers to an ordered set of DNA fragments fixed to the solid surface. For example, the microarray can be a gene chip. Methods of detecting gene expression and determining gene expression levels using arrays are well known in the art. Such methods are optionally automated.

The term “isolated nucleic acid sequence” as used herein refers to a nucleic acid substantially free of cellular material or culture medium when produced by recombinant DNA techniques, or chemical precursors, or other chemicals when chemically synthesized.

The term “polynucleotide”, “nucleic acid” and/or “oligonucleotide” as used herein refers to a sequence of nucleotide or nucleoside monomers consisting of naturally occurring bases, sugars, and intersugar (backbone) linkages, and is intended to include DNA and RNA which can be either double stranded or single stranded, represent the sense or antisense strand.

The term “probe” as used herein refers to a nucleic acid molecule that comprises a sequence of nucleotides that will hybridize specifically to a target nucleic acid sequence e.g. a coding sequence of a gene listed herein including in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14. For example the probe comprises at least 10 or more, 15 or more, 20 or more bases or nucleotides that are complementary and hybridize contiguous bases and/or nucleotides in the target nucleic acid sequence. The length of probe depends on the hybridization conditions and the sequences of the probe and nucleic acid target sequence and can for example be 10-20, 21-70, 71-100, 101-500 or more bases or nucleotides in length. For example, the probe can comprise a sequence provided herein, including those listed in any one of Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 or 18 (e.g. comprise any one of SEQ ID NO:s 1-2533). The probes can optionally be fixed to a solid support such as an array chip or a DNA microarray chip.

A person skilled in the art would recognize that “all or part of” of a particular probe or primer can be used as long as the portion is sufficient for example in the case a probe, to specifically hybridize to the intended target and in the case of a primer, sufficient to prime amplification of the intended template.

The term “probe set” as used herein refers to a set of probes that hybridize with the mRNA of a specific gene and identified by a probe set ID number, such as 209993_at, 206385_at and others as listed in Table 1, 3 5, 17 or 18. Each probe set comprises one or more probes, for example 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10, 11, 12 or more probes.

The term “primer” as used herein refers to a nucleic acid sequence, whether occurring naturally as in a purified restriction digest or produced synthetically, which is capable of acting as a point of synthesis when placed under conditions in which synthesis of a primer extension product, which is complementary to a nucleic acid strand is induced (e.g. in the presence of nucleotides and an inducing agent such as DNA polymerase and at a suitable temperature and pH). The primer must be sufficiently long to prime the synthesis of the desired extension product in the presence of the inducing agent. The exact length of the primer will depend upon factors, including temperature, sequences of the primer and the methods used. A primer typically contains 15-25 or more nucleotides or any number in between, although it can contain less. The factors involved in determining the appropriate length of primer are readily known to one of ordinary skill in the art.

The term “antibody” as used herein is intended to include monoclonal antibodies, polyclonal antibodies, and chimeric antibodies. The antibody may be from recombinant sources and/or produced in transgenic or non-transgenic animals. The term “antibody fragment” as used herein is intended to include Fab, Fab′, F(ab′)₂, scFv, dsFv, ds-scFv, dimers, minibodies, diabodies, and multimers thereof and bispecific antibody fragments. Antibodies can be fragmented using conventional techniques. For example, F(ab′)₂ fragments can be generated by treating the antibody with pepsin. The resulting F(ab′)₂ fragment can be treated to reduce disulfide bridges to produce Fab′ fragments. Papain digestion can lead to the formation of Fab fragments. Fab, Fab′ and F(ab′)₂, scFv, dsFv, ds-scFv, dimers, minibodies, diabodies, bispecific antibody fragments and other fragments can also be synthesized by recombinant techniques.

To produce polyclonal antibodies, animals can be injected once or repeatedly with an antigen representing a peptide fragment of the protein product corresponding to the nucleotide sequence of interest, alone or in conjunction with other proteins, potentially in combination with adjuvants designed to increase the immune response of the animal to this antigen or antigens in general. Polyclonal antibodies can then be harvested after variable lengths of time from the animal and subsequently utilized with or without additional purification. Such techniques are well known in the art.

To produce human monoclonal antibodies, antibody producing cells (lymphocytes) can be harvested from a human having cancer and fused with myeloma cells by standard somatic cell fusion procedures thus immortalizing these cells and yielding hybridoma cells. Such techniques are well known in the art, (e.g. the hybridoma technique originally developed by Kohler and Milstein (Nature 256:495-497 (1975)) as well as other techniques such as the human B-cell hybridoma technique (Kozbor et al., Immunol. Today 4:72 (1983)), the EBV-hybridoma technique to produce human monoclonal antibodies (Cole et al., Methods Enzymol, 121:140-67 (1986)), and screening of combinatorial antibody libraries (Huse et al., Science 246:1275 (1989)). Hybridoma cells can be screened immunochemically for production of antibodies specifically reactive with cancer cells and the monoclonal antibodies can be isolated.

Specific antibodies, or antibody fragments, reactive against particular target polypeptide gene product antigens (e.g. Table 2, 4, 6, or 14 polypeptide), can also be generated by screening expression libraries encoding immunoglobulin genes, or portions thereof, expressed in bacteria with cell surface components. For example, complete Fab fragments, VH regions and FV regions can be expressed in bacteria using phage expression libraries (See for example Ward et al., Nature 341:544-546 (1989); Huse et al., Science 246:1275-1281 (1989); and McCafferty et al., Nature 348:552-554 (1990)).

As used herein “a user interface device” or “user interfaced” refers to a hardware component or system of components that allows an individual to interact with a computer e.g. input data, or other electronic information system, and includes without limitation command line interfaces and graphical user interfaces.

The term “similar” in the context of a gene expression level as used herein refers to a subject gene expression level that falls within the range of levels associated with a particular class e.g. prognosis, for example associated with a particular disease outcome, such as likelihood of survival.

The term “most similar” in the context of a reference expression profile refers to a reference expression profile that shows the greatest number of identities and/or degree of changes with the subject expression profile.

The phrase “therapy”, treatment”, or “treatment regimen” as used herein, refers to an approach aimed at obtaining beneficial or desired results, including clinical results and includes medical procedures and applications including for example chemotherapy, pharmaceutical interventions, surgery, radiotherapy, bone marrow transplant, stem cell transplant and naturopathic interventions as well as test treatments for treating hematological cancers. Beneficial or desired clinical results can include, but are not limited to, alleviation or amelioration of one or more symptoms or conditions, diminishment of extent of disease, stabilized (i.e. not worsening) state of disease, preventing spread of disease, delay or slowing of disease progression, amelioration or palliation of the disease state, and remission (whether partial or total), whether detectable or undetectable. “Treatment” or “treatment regimen” can also mean prolonging survival as compared to expected survival if not receiving treatment.

Moreover, a “treatment” or “prevention” regime of a subject with a therapeutically effective amount of a compound of the present disclosure may consist of a single administration, or alternatively comprise a series of applications.

A “suitable treatment” as used herein refers to a treatment suitable according to the determined prognosis. For example, a suitable treatment for a subject with a poor prognosis can include a more aggressive treatment, for example, in the case of AML, this can include a bone marrow transplant.

As used herein, “screening a new drug candidate” refers to evaluating the ability of a new drug or therapeutic equivalent to target CSCs for example LSCs in a hematological cancer.

As used herein, the term “molecular risk status” refers to the presence or absence of molecular risk factors associated with prognosis. For example, a subject in a “high molecular risk (HMR) group” includes a subject having NPM1wt/FLT3wt or FLT3ITD positive CN AML which is associated with poor prognosis; and a subject in a “low molecular risk (LMR) group” includes a subject with NPM1mut/FLT3wt CN AML.

In understanding the scope of the present disclosure, the term “comprising” and its derivatives, as used herein, are intended to be open ended terms that specify the presence of the stated features, elements, components, groups, integers, and/or steps, but do not exclude the presence of other unstated features, elements, components, groups, integers and/or steps. The foregoing also applies to words having similar meanings such as the terms, “including”, “having” and their derivatives. Finally, terms of degree such as “substantially”, “about” and “approximately” as used herein mean a reasonable amount of deviation of the modified term such that the end result is not significantly changed. These terms of degree should be construed as including a deviation of at least ±5% of the modified term if this deviation would not negate the meaning of the word it modifies.

The recitation of numerical ranges by endpoints herein includes all numbers and fractions subsumed within that range (e.g., 1 to 5 includes 1, 1.5, 2, 2.75, 3, 3.90, 4, and 5). It is also to be understood that all numbers and fractions thereof are presumed to be modified by the term “about.” Further, it is to be understood that “a,” “an,” and “the” include plural referents unless the content clearly dictates otherwise. The term “about” means plus or minus 0.1 to 50%, 5-50%, or 10-40%, preferably 10-20%, more preferably 10% or 15%, of the number to which reference is being made.

II. Methods and Computer Product

It is demonstrated herein that a LSC gene expression profile comprising for example 25 probe sets (Table 1, SEQ ID NO:1-280) corresponding to 23 genes (Table 2), 48 probe sets (Table 5; SEQ ID NO:1-280 and 759-1011) corresponding to 42 genes (Table 6) as well as smaller and larger probe sets (see FIG. 7 c and Table 16) were able to distinguish patients with a poor prognosis from patients with a good prognosis. As an example, the top twenty-five probe sets associated with LSC within a FDR of 0.05 were chosen and assessed for prognostic ability as shown in Example 1. As another example, the top 48 probe sets associated with LSC within a FDR of 0.05 were chosen and assessed for prognostic ability as shown in Example 6. Other probes set groups comprising other numbers of probes sets are also predicted and herein shown to be prognostic (see for example FIG. 7 c and Table 16).

It is also demonstrated herein that a HSC gene expression profile comprising 43 probe sets (Table 3; SEQ ID NO:281-758) corresponding to 39 genes (Table 4) were able to distinguish AML patients with a poor prognosis from patients with a good prognosis. It is also demonstrated herein that an HSC gene expression profile comprising 147 probesets (Table 3 and 17) and 121 genes (Table 14) could also distinguish AML patients with a poor prognosis from patients with a good prognosis. The forty-three HSC signature probesets were identified using an ANOVA test (FDR 0.01) and the 147 signature probesets were identified using an one-way ANOVA analysis using Tukey HSD post-hoc test and Benjamini-Hochberg multiple testing correction (FDR 0.05). Other gene marker sets and/or probes sets comprising other numbers of genes or probe sets are also predicted to be prognostic.

An aspect of the disclosure includes a method for determining prognosis of a subject having a hematological cancer, comprising:

-   -   a) determining a gene expression level of each of a set of         genes, selected from leukemia stem cell (LSC) signature genes, a         hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) signature genes and/or CE-HSC/LSC         signature genes, in a sample taken from the subject;     -   b) correlating the gene expression levels of the set of genes         with a prognosis; and     -   c) providing the prognosis associated with the gene expression         levels.

In an embodiment, increased expression of the set of genes compared to a control (e.g. a subject or subjects with good prognosis) is indicative of a poor prognosis. In an embodiment, decreased expression compared to a control, in indicative of a good prognosis. In an embodiment, the gene expression levels is correlated with a prognosis by comparing to one or more reference profiles associated with a prognosis, wherein the prognosis associated with the reference expression profile most similar to the expression levels is the provided prognosis.

In an embodiment, the set of genes includes 2 or more genes described herein (e.g. listed in the Tables and/or detectable by a probe or probeset described herein).

An embodiment, includes a method for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a) determining an expression level for each gene of set a set of         genes selected from leukemia stem cell (LSC) signature genes         listed in Tables 2, 6 and/or 12, hematopoietic stem cell (HSC)         signature genes listed in Tables 4, and/or 14, and/or CE-HSC/LSC         signature genes listed in Table 19, to obtain a subject         expression profile of a sample obtained from the subject; and     -   b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor         prognosis based on the subject expression profile;         wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of         survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis         and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival         within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

As further described below, the subject can be classified by comparing the subject expression profile to one or more reference profiles associated with a prognosis and identifying the reference profile most similar to the subject expression profile thereby classifying the subject. In an embodiment, the subject is classifying by calculating a subject risk score and comparing the subject risk score to a threshold, wherein a subject risk score greater than the threshold classifies the subject as having a poor prognosis and a subject risk score less than the threshold classifies the subject as having a good prognosis. In an embodiment, the threshold is the median score associated with a population of subjects.

In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises at least 2 genes. As demonstrated in FIG. 17 for example, a LSC gene signature comprising 2 genes can differentiate AML subjects that have a poor survival from subjects that have a good survival is statistically significant.

Accordingly, an embodiment includes a method for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

a) determining a gene expression level for each gene of a set of genes selected from Tables 2, 6, 12, 4, 14, 13 and/or 19 (e.g. LSC signature genes listed in Tables 2, 6, and/or 12 and/or hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) signature genes listed in Tables 4 and/or 14, and/or CE-HSC/LSC signature genes listed in Tables 13 or 19), to obtain a subject expression profile of a sample from the subject, wherein the set of genes comprises at least 2 genes; and

b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on the subject expression profile;

wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis, compared optionally to a median outcome for the hematological cancer.

A further embodiment includes a method for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a) determining a gene expression level of each of a set of genes         selected from LSC signature genes listed in Tables 2, 6, and/or         12, to obtain a subject expression profile in a sample from the         subject, wherein the set of genes comprises at least 2 genes;         and     -   b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor         prognosis based on the subject expression profile;         wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of         survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis         and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival         within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

Table 12 comprises a list of the top 80 most predictive probesets and the genes detected by the probesets. Table 2 comprises 25 probesets that detect 23 genes and Table 6 comprises 48 probesets that detect 42 genes. The genes listed in Table 2 and 6 are also found in Table 12 and the genes listed in Table 2 are also found in Table 6. In an embodiment, the set of genes is selected from Table 6. In a further embodiment, the set of genes comprises the genes listed in Table 6.

Yet another embodiment includes a method for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a) determining a gene expression level of each gene of a set of         genes selected from HSC signature genes listed in Tables 4         and/or 14, to obtain a subject expression profile in a sample         from the subject, wherein the set of genes comprises at least 2         genes; and     -   b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor         prognosis based on the expression profile;         wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of         survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis         and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival         within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

Table 4 comprises 48 probesets, which detect 39 genes and Table 14 comprises 149 probesets that detect 121 genes. Table 20 includes a subset of HSC signature genes that were analyzed by qRT-PCR analysis. The genes listed in Table 20 are also found in Table 14. In an embodiment, the set of genes is selected from Table 20.

A further embodiment, includes a method for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a) determining a gene expression level of each gene of a set of         genes selected from CE-HSC/LSC signature genes listed in Table         19, to obtain a subject expression profile in a sample from the         subject, wherein the set of genes comprises at least 2 genes;         and     -   b) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor         prognosis based on the expression profile;         wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of         survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis         and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival         within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

Table 19 comprises a subset of HSC signature genes that are also expressed in LSC. Table 13 comprises a subset of the Table 19 genes. In an embodiment, the set of genes is selected from Table 13.

As mentioned, signatures comprising 2 genes can differentiate AML patients with poor and good survival. In an embodiment, at least one of the set of genes is ceroid-lipofuscinosis, neuronal 5 (CLN5) or neurofibromin 1 (NF1) In an embodiment, CLN5 is detected by one or mores of probe set ID: 214252_s_at. In an embodiment, NF1 is detected by one or more probes of probe set ID 212676_at.

Two genes overlap (RBPMS and FRMD4B) between the HSC and LSC signatures, or between the LSC and CE-HSC/LSC lists. In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises RBPMS and/or FRMD4B.

FIGS. 14 a and 14 b, shown an analysis of enrichment of LSC (14A) or HSC (14B) signatures in the expression data for poor cytogenetic risk AML vs good cytogenetic risk AML. FIGS. 14 a and 14 b show that the stem cell signatures correlate with the gene expression in poor risk AML vs good risk. In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the genes listed in FIG. 14 a and/or FIG. 14 b.

FIG. 14 also lists ‘leading edge’ genes. In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the leading edge genes in FIG. 14 a and/or 14 b. Also of the HSC leading edge genes, 21 overlap with the 44 CE-HSC/LSC signature gene list. Accordingly in an embodiment, the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the 21 overlap genes. In an embodiment, the set comprises at least 5, at least 10, at least 15, at least 20 or 21 of the 21 overlap genes.

Determination of prognosis, e.g. good prognosis or poor prognosis, involves in an embodiment, classifying a subject with a hematological cancer such as leukemia, based on the similarity of a subject's gene expression profile to a reference expression profile associated with a particular outcome. Accordingly, in an embodiment, the disclosure provides a method for classifying a subject having a hematological cancer as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis, comprising:

-   -   a) calculating a first measure of similarity between a subject         expression profile and a good prognosis reference profile and a         second measure of similarity between the subject expression         profile and a poor prognosis reference profile; the subject         expression profile comprising the expression levels of a first         set of genes in a sample from the subject; the good prognosis         reference profile comprising, for each gene in the first set of         genes, the average expression level of the gene in a set of good         prognosis subjects; and the poor prognosis reference profile         comprising, for each gene in the first set of genes, the average         expression level of the gene in a set of poor prognosis         subjects, the first set of genes comprising at least 2, or at         least 5 of the genes listed in Table 2, 4 6, 12, 13, 14, 19,         and/or 20 and/or genes detected by probes listed in Tables 1, 3,         5, 17 and/or 18;     -   b) classifying the subject as good prognosis if the subject         expression profile has a higher similarity to the good prognosis         reference profile than to the poor prognosis reference profile,         or classifying the subject as poor prognosis if the subject         expression profile has a higher similarity to the poor prognosis         reference profile than to the good prognosis reference profile.

A number of algorithms can be used to assess similarity. For example, a Naïve Bayes probabilistic model is trained on data. In order to stratify the class of a new patient (prognosis of survival/non-survival) the Naïve Bayes classifier combines this probabilistic model with a decision rule: assign the sample to the class (survival/non-survival)) that is most probable; this is known as the maximum a posteriori or MAP decision rule.

The similarity can also be assessed by determining if the similarity between a subject expression profile and a reference profile is above or below a predetermined threshold. For example, the expression profile can be summed to provide a subject risk score. If the score is above a selected or predetermined threshold, the subject has a poor prognosis and if below the threshold the subject has a good prognosis.

In an embodiment, the subject expression profile is used to calculate a subject risk score, wherein the subject is classified as having a good prognosis if the subject risk score is low and as having a poor prognosis if the subject risk score is high. For example, the gene expression of 5 or more genes of a LSC and/or HSC signature genes could be determined by microarray analysis wherein the microarray comprises probes and/or probe sets directed to for example the 5 or more of the LSC and/or HSC signature genes The microarray results could be scaled to a standard expression range, (e.g. for example as determined using the 160 AML patients described in the Examples). An expression score is calculated from the summed expression levels detected using the probe or probe sets (e.g. one or more of the probes or probe sets listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18, or one or more probe sets selected from SEQ ID NOs:1-2533 and compared to a reference score or threshold (e.g. such as the median expression score of the 160 AML samples form the initial dataset) to determine if the subject falls within the poor prognosis or the good prognosis category based on the expression profile. In an embodiment, an expression profile is used to calculate a subject risk score, wherein the subject is classified as having a good prognosis if the subject risk score is below for example, a median risk score or threshold and as having a poor prognosis if for example the subject risk score is above the median or threshold. In another embodiment, an expression score or subject risk score is calculated by: a) calculating the log 2 expression value of the LSC or HSC gene signature marker set for the sample; b) centering the log 2 expression value of step b) to a zero mean; c) taking the sum of the log 2 expression values.

The predetermined period can vary depending on the likelihood of a particular outcome. In another embodiment, the predetermined period is 1 year, 2 years, 3 years, 4 years or 5 years.

The reference profiles and thresholds can be pre-generated, for example the reference expression profiles can be comprised in a database or generated de novo.

In an embodiment, the methods are used to measure treatment response. For example, the group used to test the prognostic power of the gene expression signature profiles described herein were therapeutically treated. The expression profiles were obtained prior to treatment and outcome was determined after treatment. Accordingly, the methods can be used to predict treatment response wherein a subject expression profile associated with poor prognosis is indicative of an increased likelihood of a poor or no treatment response and a subject expression profile associated with a good prognosis is indicative of an increased likelihood of a treatment response compared to for example the median response for example, the median response for the leukemia. Therefore, in an aspect, the disclosure includes a method for monitoring a response to a cancer treatment in a subject having a hematological cancer, comprising:

-   -   a. collecting a first sample from the subject before the subject         has received the cancer treatment;     -   b. collecting a subsequent sample from the subject after the         subject has received the cancer treatment;     -   c. determining the gene expression levels of a set of genes         selected from LSC signature genes, HSC signature genes and/or         CE-HSC/LSC signature genes in the first and the subsequent         samples according to a method described herein, to obtain a         first sample subject expression profile and a subsequent sample         subject expression profile, wherein the set of genes comprises         at least 2 genes; and     -   d. calculating a first sample subject risk score and a         subsequent sample subject risk score;         wherein a lower subsequent sample risk score compared to the         first sample risk score is indicative of a positive response,         and a higher subsequent sample risk score compared to the first         risk score is indicative of a negative response.

In another aspect, the methods described herein are used to screen for a putative drug candidate for a hematological cancer. In an embodiment the method comprises: contacting a test population of cells with a test substance; determining a gene expression level for each gene of a set of genes selected from leukemia stem cell (LSC) signature genes listed in Tables 2, 6, and/or 12, hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) signature genes listed in Tables 4 and/or 14, and/or CE-HSC/LSC signature genes listed in Table 19, to obtain an expression profile for the test population of cells and comparing to a control population of cells; calculating an expression score for the test population of cells and the control population of cells wherein a decreased expression score in the test population of cells compared to the control population is indicative that the test substance is a putative drug candidate. In an embodiment, the test and control population of cells are hematological cancer cells.

In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the genes listed in Table 2, 6, and/or 12 and the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the genes listed in Table 4 and/or 14. In another embodiment, the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the genes listed in Table 20. In another embodiment, the set of genes comprises 2 or more of the genes listed in Table 13 or Table 19.

In a further embodiment, the set of genes comprises at least at least 2-5, at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 20-25, at least 26-30, at least 31-35, at least 36-40 or at least 41, at least 42 or at least 43, at least 41-45, at least 46-50, at least 51-55, at least 56-60, at least 61-65, at least 66-70, at least 71-75, at least 76-80, at least 81-85, at least 86-90, at least 91-95, at least 96-100, at least 101-105, at least 106 to 110, at least 111 to 115, at least 116 to 120 or 121 genes.

In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises the genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12, 13, 14, 19 or 20. In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises the genes listed in Table 19. In another embodiment, the set of genes comprises the genes listed in Table 13.

In an embodiment, the set of genes does not include one or more of ABCB1, BAALC, ERG, MEIS1, and EVI1 (also known as MECOM).

In another embodiment, the gene expression levels are determined using probes and/or probe sets. In an embodiment, the probes and probe sets are selected from SEQ ID NOs: 1 to 2533.

In an embodiment, the gene expression levels are determined using at least 2-5, at least 6-10, at least 11-14, at least 15-19, at least 20-24, or 25 LSC probe sets listed in Table 1; and/or at least 2-5, at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 21-25, at least 26-30, at least 31-35, at least 36-40, at least 41-45 at least 46-50, at least 51-55, at least 56-60, at least 61-65, at least 66-70, at least 71-75, least 81-85, at least 86-90, at least 91-95, at least 96-100, at least 101-105, at least 106-110, at least 111-115, at least 116-120, at least 121-125, at least 126-130, at least 131-135, at least 136-140, at least 141-145, or at least 146-147 probe sets. In an embodiment, combinations of probes and probes sets listed in different tables are used to determine the gene expression levels.

Successive addition of the most highly ranked, determined by p-value, probes demonstrated a correlation with overall survival (FIG. 7 c). For example, successive addition of the top 35 probes, showed the greatest correlation with overall survival. Therefore, in still another embodiment, the gene expression level is determined by one or more probes and/or one or more probe sets selected from probesets listed in Table 16.

In yet another embodiment, a method described herein also comprises obtaining a sample from the subject, e.g. for determining the expression level of the set of genes. The sample, in an embodiment, comprises a blood sample or a bone marrow sample. In an embodiment, the sample comprises fresh tissue, frozen tissue sample, a cell sample, or a formalin-fixed paraffin-embedded sample. In an embodiment, the sample is submerged in a RNA preservation solution, for example to allow for storage. In an embodiment, the sample is submerged in Trizol®. In an embodiment, the sample is stored as soon as possible at ultralow (for example, below −190° C.) temperatures. Storage conditions are designed to maximally retain mRNA integrity and preserve the original relative abundance of mRNA species, as determined by those skilled in the art. The sample in an embodiment is optionally processed, for example, to obtain an isolated RNA fraction and/or an isolated polypeptide fraction. The sample is in an embodiment, treated with a RNAse inhibitor to prevent RNA degradation.

In another embodiment, the sample is a fractionated blood sample or a fractionated bone marrow sample. In an embodiment, the sample is fractionated to increase the percentage of LSC and/or HSC. In an embodiment, the fraction is predominantly for example greater than 90% CD34+. In another embodiment, the fraction is predominantly, for example greater than 90% CD38−. In a further embodiment, the fraction is predominantly, for example greater than 90% CD34+ and CD38−.

Wherein the gene expression level being determined is a nucleic acid, the gene expression levels can be determined using a number of methods for example a microarray chip or PCR, optionally multiplex PCR, northern blotting, or other methods and techniques designed to produce quantitative or relative data for the levels of mRNA species corresponding to specified nucleotide sequences present in a sample. These methods are known in the art. In an embodiment, the gene expression level is determined using a microarray chip and/or PCR, optionally multiplex PCR.

Further, for example a person skilled in the art would be familiar with the necessary normalizations necessary for each technique.

The methods described can utilize probes or probe sets comprising or optionally consisting of a nucleic acid sequence listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18. In an embodiment, the gene expression level is determined by detecting mRNA expression using one or more probes and/or one or more probe sets listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18.

In an embodiment, the method comprises additionally considering known prognostic factors, such as molecular risk status. For example, the mutational status of FLT3ITD and NPM1 has been associated with risk status in AML subjects, with low molecular risk associated with NPM1mut FLT3ITD− and high molecular risk associated with FLT3ITD+ or NPM1wtFLT3ITD−. It is demonstrated herein that the gene signatures can further stratify for example molecular risk subjects to identify subjects with poor prognosis.

Accordingly, in an embodiment, the method further comprises determining the molecular risk status of the subject. In an embodiment, the molecular risk status is low molecular risk (LMR) or high molecular risk (HMR) according to NPM1 and/or FLT3ITD status, wherein the subject is identified as LMR if the subject comprises a mutant NPMI gene and is FLT3IT positive, and is identified as HMR if the subject has a wildtype NPMI gene and is FLT3ITD negative. In a further embodiment, the subject is LMR and optionally the set of genes comprises genes selected from LSC signature genes. In an embodiment, the subject is HMR and optionally the set of comprises genes selected from HSC signature genes.

In an embodiment, the methods described herein can be used for example to select subjects for a clinical trial.

In an embodiment, the methods described herein can be used to select suitable treatment. For example, subjects with poor prognosis e.g. a high risk of non-survival may be advantageously treated with specific therapeutic regimens. More accurate classification can reduce the number of patients identified as high risk. Further, more accurate classification allows for treatments to be tailored and for aggressive therapies with greater risks or side effects to be reserved for patients with poor outcome. For example, CN-AML patients are considered intermediate risk of poor prognosis. One therapeutic option for treating AML is transplant. Given the intermediate risk, one option available to a patient is transplant, particularly if there was a related donor. However, where only an unrelated donor is available, because of complications, a transplant may not be recommended or carry additional risks. An application of the methods and products described herein is to provide a test to aid a medical professional in making such a decision. For example, where a patient has an intermediate risk but is identified by the methods and products described herein as having an increased likelihood of a good outcome, such a patient may be reclassified in a more “favorable’ category such that a transplant might not be recommended. Similarly, if the methods and products identified the patient as having an increased likelihood of a poor prognosis, the patient may be reclassified in a more “unfavorable’ category suggesting that a transplant, even from unrelated donors might be indicated. Accordingly, a better prognostic prediction could assist in making treatment decisions.

Accordingly in another aspect, the disclosure includes a method further comprising the step of providing a cancer treatment to a subject consistent with the disease outcome prognosis. In an embodiment, the disclosure provides use of a prognosis determined according to the method described herein, and identifying a suitable treatment for treating a subject with a hematological cancer. An embodiment includes a method of treating a subject having a hematological cancer, comprising determining a prognosis of the subject according to a method described herein and providing a suitable cancer treatment to the subject in need thereof according to the prognosis determined.

In another embodiment, the method further comprises providing a cancer treatment for the subject consistent with the molecular risk group and disease outcome prognosis. In an embodiment the cancer treatment is a stem cell transplant.

In an embodiment, the cancer treatment comprises a stem cell transplant. In another embodiment, the cancer treatment comprises a bone marrow transplant, or other standard treatment, such as chemotherapy.

In addition to being able to differentiate AML patients according to prognosis, the HSC signature is expected to be able to differentiate patients with hematological cancers other than AML, particularly other leukemias, that like AML for example have an altered growth and differentiation block and/or hematological cancers that are CSC hematological cancers. For example, it is myeloid leukemias such as MDS (Myelodysplastic Syndrome) or MPD (myeloproliferative disease, including CML—chronic myeloid leukemia which is considered a stem cell disease.

In an embodiment, the hematological cancer is leukemia. In an embodiment, the leukemia is acute myeloid leukemia (AML). In an embodiment, the hematological cancer is cytogenetically normal. In another embodiment, the AML is cytogenetically normal AML (CN-AML). In a further embodiment, the AML is M1, M2, M4, M4eO, M5, M5a, M5b, or unclassified AML. In yet a further embodiment, the AML is MO, M6, M7 or M8 AML. In another embodiment, the leukemia is ALL, CLL or CML or a subtype thereof. In another embodiment, the hematological cancer is lymphoma. In a further embodiment, the hematological cancer is multiple myeloma.

The methods described herein can be implemented using a computer.

Another aspect of the disclosure includes a computer-implemented method for determining a prognosis of a subject having a hematological cancer comprising: classifying, on a computer, the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on a subject expression profile comprising measurements of expression levels of a set of genes in a sample from the subject, the set of genes selected from genes listed in Table 2, 4 6, 12, 13, 14, 19, and/or 20 and/or genes detected by probes listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18; wherein a good prognosis predicts increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis, and wherein a poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.

In an aspect, the disclosure provides a computer-implemented method for determining a prognosis of a subject having a hematological cancer comprising: classifying, on a computer, the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on an expression profile comprising measurements of expression levels of a set of genes selected from LSC signature genes or HSC signature genes in a sample from the subject; wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis, and wherein a poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis. In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises at least one gene of the LSC signature genes or the HSC signature genes.

The results or the results of a step are optionally displayed or outputted. Accordingly, in an embodiment, the method further comprises displaying or outputting a result of one of the steps to a user interface device, a computer readable storage medium, a monitor, or a computer that is part of a network.

Another aspect of the disclosure includes a computer product for implementing the methods described herein e.g. for predicting prognosis, selecting patients for a clinical trial, or selecting therapy.

A further aspect of the disclosure provides a non-transitory computer readable storage medium with an executable program stored thereon, wherein the program is for predicting outcome or prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer, and wherein the program instructs a microprocessor to perform one or more of the steps of any of the methods described herein.

A computer system comprising:

-   -   a) a user interface capable of receiving and/or inputting a         selection of subject gene expression levels of a set of genes,         the set comprising at least 2 genes listed in Table 2, 4 6, 12,         13, 14, 19, and/or 20 and/or genes detected by probes listed in         Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18, for use in comparing to the gene         reference expression profiles in the database;     -   b) a reference database including records comprising reference         expression profiles associated with clinical outcomes, each         reference profile comprising the expression levels of a set of         genes listed in Table 2, 4 6, 12, 13, 14, 19, and/or 20 and/or         genes detected by probes listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18;     -   c) an analysis module for comparing the received or inputted         selection of subject gene expression levels to the reference         expression profiles and identifying a most similar reference         profile and associated prognosis; and     -   d) an output that displays a prediction of prognosis according         to the expression levels of the set of genes.

An exemplary system is a computer system having for example: a central processing unit; a main non-transitory storage unit, for example, a hard disk drive, for storing software and data, the storage unit controlled by storage controller; a system memory, preferably high speed random-access memory (RAM), for storing system control programs, data, and application programs, for example for viewing and manipulating data, evaluating formulae for the purpose of providing a prognosis, comprising programs and data loaded from non-transitory storage unit; system memory may also include read-only memory (ROM); a user interface, comprising one or more input devices (e.g., keyboard) and a display or other output device; a network interface card for connecting to any wired or wireless communication network (e.g., a wide area network such as the Internet); a communication bus for interconnecting the aforementioned elements of the system; and a power source to power the aforementioned elements. Operation of computer is controlled primarily by operating system, which is executed by central processing unit. Operating system can be stored in system memory. In addition to an operating system, in a typical implementation system memory includes: a file system for controlling access to the various files and data structures used by the methods and computer products disclosed herein. The system memory can optionally include a coprocessor dedicated to carrying out mathematical operations.

Another aspect includes a computerized control system 10 for carrying out the methods of the disclosure.

In an embodiment, the computerized control system 10 comprises at least one processor and memory configured to provide:

-   -   a) a control module 20 to receive a dataset comprising a subject         expression profile comprising a set of gene expression levels         for a set of genes, each gene of the set of genes selected from         LSC signature genes listed in Tables 2, 6 and/or 12 or HSC         signature genes listed in Tables 4 and/or 14;     -   c) an analysis module 30 to:         -   i) compare the subject expression profile to a reference             expression profile comprising an expression level for each             gene of the set of genes; and         -   ii) identify a prognosis associated with the subject             expression levels.

A schematic representation of an embodiment of a computerized control system 10 is provided in FIG. 17.

In an embodiment, the set of genes is selected from Tables 2, 4 6, 12, 13, 14, 19, and/or 20 and/or genes detected by probes listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18.

In an embodiment, the subject expression profile is compared to a reference expression profile by comparing a subject risk score to a selected threshold, wherein the subject risk score is calculated by summing the subject expression profile gene expression values, optionally the log 2 expression values, of the set of genes.

In an embodiment, the dataset is generated using an array probed with a sample obtained from the subject.

In an embodiment, the computerized control system controls and/or receives data from an imaging module 50. In an embodiment, the imaging module is a microarray scanner, which optionally detects dye fluorescence. In an embodiment, the imaging module is configured to collect the images and spot intensity signals. In an embodiment, the computerized control system 10 further comprises an image data processor for processing the image data.

In an embodiment, the analysis module 30 further determines a prognosis characteristic such as a hazard ratio or risk score.

In an embodiment, the computerized control system 10 further comprises a search module 40 for searching an expression reference databases 70 to identify and retrieve reference expression profiles associated with a prognosis.

In an embodiment, the computerized control system 10 further comprises a user interface 60 operable to receive one or more selection criteria, wherein the processor is further operable to configure the analysis module 30 to include the criteria received in the user interface 60. For example, the selection criteria can comprise a selected threshold.

A further aspect comprises a non-transitory computer-readable storage medium comprising an executable program stored thereon, wherein the program instructs a processor to perform the following steps for a plurality of gene expression levels: calculate a subject risk score; and determine a prognosis according to the subject risk score.

In an embodiment, the program further instructs the processor to determine a prognosis characteristic such as a hazard ratio.

In an embodiment, the program further instructs the processor to output a prognosis and/or a prognosis characteristic such as a hazard ratio.

In an embodiment, one or more of the user interface components can be integrated with one another in embodiments such as handheld computers.

In an embodiment, the computer system comprises a computer readable storage medium described herein.

In an embodiment, the computer system is for performing a method described herein.

III. Compositions, Arrays and Kits

An aspect provides a composition comprising a set of probes or primers for determining expression of a set of genes. In an embodiment, the composition comprises at least 2 nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 or 18 (SEQ ID NO:1-2533. In an embodiment, the composition comprises a set of nucleic acid molecules wherein the sequence of each molecule comprises a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from SEQ ID NO:1-2533.

Another aspect includes an array comprising, for each gene in a set of genes, the set of genes comprising at least 2 of the genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12, 13, 14, 19 and/or 20, one or more polynucleotide probes complementary and hybridizable to a coding sequence in the gene.

In an embodiment, the composition or array comprises at least 3-22, at least 23-44, at least 45-66, at least 67-88, at least 89-110, at least 111-132, at least 133-154, at least 155-176, at least 177-198, at least 199-220, at least 221-242, at least 243-264, at least 265-286, at least 287-308, at least 309-330, at least 331-352, at least 353-374, at least 375-396, at least 397-418, at least 419-440, at least 441-462, at least 463-478 or more nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18 (SEQ ID NOs:1-2533 In yet another embodiment, the composition comprises 2-2533, or any number there between, nucleic acid molecules comprising or consisting of a polynucleotide probe sequence listed in Tables 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18 (SEQ ID NOs:1-2533).

In yet another embodiment, the composition comprises at least 2 nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from SEQ ID NO:1-280 and 759-1011.

In yet another embodiment, the composition comprises at least 2 nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from SEQ ID NO:281-758 and 1012 to 2533.

In another embodiment, the composition or array comprises at least 3-22, at least 23-44, at least 45-66, at least 67-88, at least 89-110, at least 111-132, at least 133-154, at least 155-176, at least 177-198, at least 199-220, at least 221-242, at least 243-264, at least 265-280, at least 281-295, at least 296-310, at least 311-325, at least 326-340, at least 341-355, at least 356-380, at least 381-395, at least 396-410, at least 411-425, at least 426-440, at least 441-455, at least 456-470, at least 471-485, at least 486-500, at least 501-515, at least 516-532 or up to 533 nucleic acid molecules/probes. In an embodiment, the composition or array comprises any number of nucleic acid molecules/probes from 3 to 2533, or more.

In another embodiment, the composition comprises at least 2 nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide sequence selected from the probes comprised in the probe set IDs listed in Table 16.

In an embodiment, the set of genes comprises at least 3-5, at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 21-25 of the genes listed in Table 2 and/or at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 21-25, at least 26-30, at least 31-35, or at least 36-39 of the genes listed in Table 4, at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 21-25, at least 26-30, at least 31-35, or at least 36-39 or at least 41-43 of the genes listed in Table 6, at least at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 21-25, at least 26-30, at least 31-35, at least 36-39, at least 41-45, 46-66, at least 67-80, of the genes listed in Table 12 and/or at least 6-10, at least 11-15, at least 16-20, at least 21-25, at least 26-30, at least 31-35, or at least 36-39, at least 41-45, 46-66, at least 67-88, at least 89-110, or at least 111-121 of the genes listed in Table 14.

The array can be a microarray designed for evaluation of the relative levels of mRNA species in a sample.

Another aspect of the disclosure provides a kit for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a) an array described herein;     -   b) a kit control; and     -   c) optionally instructions for use.

A further aspect of the disclosure includes a kit for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a) a set of probes wherein each probe of the set hybridizes         and/or is complementary to a nucleic acid sequence corresponding         to at least 2, or at least 5, genes selected from Table 2, 4, 6,         12 and/or 14;     -   b) a kit control; and     -   c) optionally instructions for use.

In an embodiment, the kit further comprises one or more specimen collectors and/or RNA preservation solution.

In an embodiment, the specimen collector comprises a sterile vial or tube suitable for receiving a biopsy or other sample. In an embodiment, the specimen collector comprises RNA preservation solution. In another embodiment, RNA preservation solution is added subsequent to the reception of sample. In another embodiment, the sample is frozen at ultralow (for example, below 190° C.) temperatures as soon as possible after collection.

In an embodiment the RNA preservation solution comprises one or more inhibitors of RNAse. In another embodiment, the RNA preservation solution comprises Trizol® or other reagents designed to improve stability of RNA.

In an embodiment, the kit comprises at least 3-22, at least 23-44, at least 45-66, at least 67-88, at least 89-110, at least 111-132, at least 133-154, at least 155-176, at least 177-198, at least 199-220, at least 221-242, at least 243-264, at least 265-286, at least 287-308, at least 309-330, at least 331-352, at least 353-374, at least 375-396, at least 397-418, at least 419-440, at least 441-462 or at least 463-473 and for example up to 2533 or any number between 1 and 2533, nucleic acid molecules, each comprising and/or corresponding to a polynucleotide probe sequence listed in Table 1, 3, 5, 17 and/or 18 (SEQ ID NO:1-2533.

Another aspect of the disclosure provides a kit determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer comprising:

-   -   a set of antibodies comprising at least two antibodies, wherein         each antibody of the set is specific for a polypeptide         corresponding to a gene selected from Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or         14; and     -   instructions for use.

In an embodiment, the kit comprises a set of antibodies specific for polypeptides corresponding to at least 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 or at least 10 of the genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14. In another embodiment, the kit comprises a set of antibodies specific for polypeptides corresponding to at least 11-15, 16-20, 21-25, 26-30, 31-35, 36-40, 41-45 or more of the genes listed in Tables 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14.

In an embodiment, the antibody or probe is labeled. The label is preferably capable of producing, either directly or indirectly, a detectable signal. For example, the label may be radio-opaque or a radioisotope, such as ³H, ¹⁴C, ³²P, ³⁵S, ¹²³I, ¹²⁵I, ¹³¹I; a fluorescent (fluorophore) or chemiluminescent (chromophore) compound, such as fluorescein isothiocyanate, rhodamine or luciferin; an enzyme, such as alkaline phosphatase, beta-galactosidase or horseradish peroxidase; an imaging agent; or a metal ion.

In another embodiment, the detectable signal is detectable indirectly. A person skilled in the art will appreciate that a number of methods can be used to determine the amount of a polypeptide product of a gene described herein, including immunoassays such as flow cytometry, Western blots, ELISA, and immunoprecipitation followed by SDS-PAGE, as well as immunocytochemistry or immunohistochemistry. For example, flow cytometry or other methods for detecting polypeptides, can be used for detecting surface protein expression levels.

The kit can comprise in an embodiment, one or more probes or one or more antibodies specific for a gene. In another embodiment, the set or probes or antibodies comprise probes or antibodies wherein each probe or antibody detects a different gene listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 or 14.

In an embodiment, the kit is used for a method described herein.

The following non-limiting examples are illustrative of the present disclosure:

EXAMPLES Example 1 Methods Sorting of Patient AML Samples

Peripheral blood cells were collected from patients with newly diagnosed AML after obtaining informed consent according to procedures approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University Health Network. Individuals were diagnosed according to the standards of the French-American-British (FAB) classification. Cells from sixteen different samples representing 7 AML subtypes were investigated in the studies. Specifically, low density peripheral blood cells were collected from 16 AML patients representing 7 FAB subtypes (2 M1, 1 M2, 1 M4, 1 M4e, 1 M5, 4 M5a, 1 M5b, 5 unclassified) by density centrifugation over a Ficoll® gradient. Low-density mononuclear cells isolated from individuals with AML were frozen viably in FCS plus 10% (vol/vol) DMSO. For sorting of AML sub-populations, AML blasts were stained with anti-CD34-APC (Becton-Dickinson) and anti-CD38-PE (Becton-Dickinson) and were sorted using either a Dako Mo-Flo (Becton-Dickinson) cell sorter or a BD FACSAria (Becton-Dickinson). Purity of each subpopulation exceeded 95%. Fractionated cells were captured in 100% FCS and recovered by centrifugation. As a result, each AML patient sample was sorted into 4 subpopulations based upon CD34 and CD38 antibody staining and cells recovered for functional and gene expression analysis.

Transplantation of Sorted AML Cells into NOD/SCID Mice

NOD/SCID mice (Jackson Laboratory, Bar Harbor, Me.) were bred and maintained in microisolater cages. Twenty-four hours before transplantation, mice were irradiated with 2.75 to 3.45 Gy gamma irradiation from a 137Cs source. Sorted AML cells were counted and resuspended into 1-5% FCS in 1× phosphate buffered saline (PBS) pH 7.4 and injected directly into the right femur of each experimental animal. Six and a half to fifteen weeks post-transplant, mice were euthanized by cervical dislocation and hind leg bones removed and flushed with media to recover engrafted cells. Percent human AML engraftment was assessed by flow cytometry for human CD45+ staining cells (Lapidot et al., 1994).

mRNA Expression Array

mRNA was extracted using the Trizol® RNA preparation as recommended by the manufacturer (Invitrogen) and the RNA was amplified by Nugen amplification per manufacturer's instructions (NuGEN Technologies, Inc.). Probes were labeled and Affymetrix U133A (high-throughput) microarrays were run as per manufacturer's instructions. Signal was normalized by RMA followed by log 2-transformation. The LSC/primitive cell-related gene list was computed standard two-group differential expression comparison (Smyth's moderated t-test¹⁸, SCID Leukemia-Initiating Cells (SL-IC) fractions vs non-SL-IC fractions). Each probe set consists of, generally, eleven oligonucleotide probes complimentary to a corresponding gene sequence. These eleven probes are used together to measure the mRNA transcript levels of a gene sequence. Quality control measures were taken. For example, a sample was rejected as the array results obtained after measurement by Affymetrix standard techniques and prior to normalization was an outlier when compared to the other samples on a box-whisker plot.

Correlation with Overall Survival.

To assess the prognostic impact of the LSC/primitive cell related profile, the 25 probe sets that were most positively correlated with the SL-IC AML populations versus non-SL-IC populations were selected as the 25 LSC probe set signature (genes listed in Table 2; probes listed in Table 1). Publicly available overall survival and expression data was analyzed¹⁷. In short, the expression value of each probe was scaled to 0 for each probe across the 160 AML using the median value. For each AML, the expression values of the LSC probe set signature was summed for each of the 160 bone marrow AML samples. This summed value was used to divide the AML group into two equal sized populations of 80 AML each based upon above or below median expression of the summed value of the 25 LSC probe set signature. The overall survival of the two groups was examined using a Kaplan-Meier plot and log-rank (Mantel-Cox) test. Similarly, the correlation with survival and the 43 HSC probe set signature was determined in a similar way (genes listed in Table 4, probes listed in Table 3), except the 43 HSC probe sets were used instead of the 25 LSC probe sets.

Discussion

The gene expression profile of sorted populations of AML cells enriched for SL-IC cells, the LSC cells detected in the xenotransplant assay, were analyzed and compared to those populations without SL-IC, and a LSC/primitive cell related profile (25 LSC probe set signature) was developed. When this profile was used to examine overall survival in a group of 160 AML patients, there was a significant correlation with poor overall survival. Similarly, there was an excellent correlation between a 43 HSC probe set signature and poor overall survival, even though there is only one overlapping probe set between the two independently generated stem cell/primitive cell-related lists. Additionally, the AML cells used in the generation of the 25 LSC probe set signature were peripheral blood samples and the 43 HSC probe set signature was derived from cord blood, while the 160 AML samples were bone marrow samples. This suggests that these two stem cell related profiles are robust and unique.

Other groups have developed prognostic signatures for CN-AML from gene expression data of bulk AML. This approach is unique in that it involves the generation of the gene set that is based upon SL-IC in sorted cells, a functional readout that is independent of patient outcome. Likewise, the HSC profile is based upon the SCID repopulating cell assay, not overall survival. However, these independent investigations into stem cell regulation have a similar correlation with patient outcome, indicating that a stem cell profile is relevant to leukemia, whether it is the 43 HSC probe set signature or the 25 LSC probe set signature.

Example 2

The LSC signature and HSC signatures can be tested in additional leukemia patient sample sets, including sets of patient samples that contain cytogenetically abnormal AML, in order to further support the prognostic value of the signatures. For example, other blood cancers such as acute lymphoblastic leukemia, lymphomas, CML, and CLL can be tested.

Example 3

The expression levels of subsets of the LSC signature genes and HSC signature genes, combinations of the genes in the LSC probe set signature and HSC probe set signature as well as shared genes such as the CE-HSC/LSC signature genes will be determined and assessed to identify and/or confirm the prognostic abilities of said gene sets according to the methods described in Example 1.

Example 5

Similar to Example 1, using the sorting of patient AML samples, transplantation of sorted AML cells into NOD/SCID mice, mRNA expression array, and correlation with overall survival procedures a 43 gene signature marker set prognostic of outcome was identified (Table 6). The expression levels of the genes in the LSC gene signature were detected using 48 probe sets (Table 5). The 48 probe set LSC/primitive cell-related gene list was computed USING standard two-group differential expression comparison (Smyth's moderated t-test 18, SL-IC fractions vs non-SL-IC fractions). Benjamini and Hochberg multiple testing correction was performed to generate a list of 48 probe sets with a false discovery rate of 0.05.”

Example 6

Evidence from experimental xenografts show that some solid tumours and leukemias are organized as cellular hierarchies sustained by cancer stem cells (CSC). Despite the promise of the CSC model, the relevance to human disease remains uncertain and improvements to prognosis and therapy have yet to be derived from CSC properties. Moreover, there are conflicting reports of whether tumours continue to adhere to a CSC model when enhanced xenograft assays are applied. Here it is demonstrated that 16 primary human acute myeloid leukemia (AML) samples, fractionated into 4 populations and subjected to sensitive in vivo leukemia stem cell (LSC) analysis, follow a CSC model of organization. Each fraction was subjected to gene expression analysis and a global LSC-specific signature was determined from functionally defined LSC. Similarly, using human cord blood, a hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) enriched gene signature was established. Bioinformatic analysis identified a core transcriptional program that LSC and HSC share, revealing the molecular machinery that underlies stemness properties. Both LSC and HSC signatures, when assessed against a large group of cytogenetically normal AML samples, showed prognostic significance independent of other factors. The data establishes that determinants of stemness influence clinical outcome of AML and more broadly they provide direct evidence for the clinical relevance of CSC.

The cancer stem cell (CSC) model posits that many cancers are organized hierarchically and sustained by a subpopulation of CSC at the apex that possess self renewal capacity¹. This model has elicited considerable interest within the greater cancer community especially as data is accumulating showing the relative resistance of CSC to therapy²⁻⁷. A key implication of the model is that cure should be dependent upon eradication of CSC, consequently patient outcome is determined by CSC properties. The CSC paradigm is well supported by two lines of evidence derived from xenotransplant models: primary cancer cells capable of generating a tumour in vivo can be purified and distinguished from those cancer cells that lack this ability; and CSC can be serially transplanted providing evidence for self renewer. However, there is little progress in translating understanding of CSC biology to improved prognosis or treatment of human disease. Thus, the importance of CSC outside of xenotransplant models is unclear and their relevance to human disease is not firmly established.

The best evidence to substantiate the clinical significance of CSC would be robust demonstration of improved survival in patients treated with new CSC-targeted therapeutics. In the absence of treatment data, the prognostic relevance of CSC can be indirectly established by correlating patient survival outcomes with CSC-specific biological properties determined using state-of-the-art xenograft models. By extension, the CSC hypothesis predicts that the heterogeneous survival outcomes observed within uniformly treated patient cohorts may be reflective of variation in CSC properties among patients. Emerging evidence from leukemia samples lends support to this prediction as correlative studies have associated characteristics linked to stem cell properties with outcome, such as the ability to engraft mice or surface expression of LSC-linked markers^(8, 9). However, these studies are based upon an older xenograft model and only investigated single cohorts, nevertheless they establish the feasibility of this approach.

If CSC properties are relevant to human disease, it follows that the molecular machinery that governs the stem cell state must influence clinical outcome. However, little is currently known of the identity of the molecular regulators that govern CSC-specific properties. Experimental data shows that LSC possess stem cell functions common to all stem cells, including self renewal and the ability to produce differentiated, non-stem cell progeny¹. Murine models have been successfully used to identify a small number of genes that regulate LSC function, including MEIS1 and BMI1^(10, 11). Gene expression profiling provides an approach to define CSC-specific attributes on a genome-wide basis. Recently, a human breast CSC signature was generated from an expression analysis where CSC-enriched populations were obtained from xenografts and some pleural effusions and compared to normal mammary cells¹². The expression of the breast CSC genes correlated with patient outcome for breast and other cancer types, although some have questioned to what degree this correlation derives from cancer-specific versus CSC-specific properties¹²⁻¹⁴. Clearly, more focused studies of global gene expression in well defined CSC and non-CSC populations from primary samples are needed to generate CSC specific signatures. Such studies should reveal the identity of important stem cell regulators and provide the basis to determine whether CSC-specific signatures correlate to clinical aspects of human disease.

The prospective isolation and subsequent functional and molecular analysis of CSC from a heterogeneous tumour population is often dependent on the distinctive expression of surface marker proteins. Historically, xenografts into SCID or NOD/SCID mice were used to confirm these early marker-dependant sorting strategies^(15, 16). However, a series of recent studies using either syngeneic murine cancer models or NOD/SCID mice with impaired residual innate immunity have cast doubt upon the reliability of NOD/SCID mice to accurately capture all cancer stem cell activityl¹⁷⁻²⁰. For example, while previous studies observed that LSC can be prospectively isolated only from the CD34+/CD38− cell fraction of acute myeloid leukemia (AML), identical to normal HSC, an improved xenotransplant system has enabled the detection of LSC in previously non-tumourigenic populations^(15, 16, 18, 19). In a separate example, the use of optimized xenotransplant methods radically altered the apparent detectable frequency of CSC from 1 in 10⁵ tumour cells to 1 in 4 tumour cells, a result that stands in stark contrast to other studies²⁰⁻²². These studies suggest that some human cancers may not follow the CSC model and strongly demonstrate the requirement for a sensitive xenotransplant model to confirm or refute the existence of a CSC hierarchy in each human cancer. More importantly, sample to sample variation between cell surface marker expression and CSC activity establishes an important principle, that all experiments designed to investigate CSC properties in purified cell fractions must assess, at the same time, all cell fractions with well validated tumour- or leukemia-initiation assays (e.g. in regards to determining a LSC or HSC signature.

Here 16 AML and 3 cord blood primary samples were fractionated and a sensitive xenotransplant assay was utilized to detect and functionally quantify each fraction for cells with LSC or HSC activity, respectively. Leukemia stem cell (LSC) and hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) gene expression signatures were identified based on this functional stem cell characterization of each purified cell fraction and bioinformatic analyses showed that they are closely correlated. Both signatures predict poor overall survival independently of other prognostic factors in patients with cytogenetically normal AML, demonstrating that stem cell gene expression programs determine patient outcome. Overall, the results establish the clinical relevance of LSC defined solely on the basis of functional xenotransplant assays.

Methods Collection of Patient Samples and Normal Hematopoietic Cells

Peripheral blood samples were collected from patients with AML after obtaining informed consent according to the procedures approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University Health Network. Low-density mononuclear cells isolated from individuals with AML were frozen viably in FCS plus 10% vol/vol DMSO. Human cord blood cells obtained from full-term deliveries from consenting healthy donors according to the procedures approved by the Research Ethics Board of the University Health Network were processed as described³³.

Cell Staining, Sorting and Flow Cytometry

Cells were stained with antibodies to CD34, CD38, and in the case of cord blood CD36, and sorted on either a MoFlo (Beckman Coulter) or FACSAria (BD Biosciences) cells sorter. AML cells were sorted into CD34+/CD38−, CD34+/CD38+, CD34−/CD38+, CD34−/CD38− populations. Three independent pooled CB samples from 15-22 donors were used for isolation of HSC subsets and progenitors. Lin− Cord blood cells were sorted into CD34+/CD38− (HSC1), CD34+/CD38lo/CD36− (HSC2), and CD34+/CD38+ (Prog) populations. The mature cord blood fraction are cord blood cells after hemolysis (lin+). Representative sorting gates are in FIG. 5. The StemSep system (Stem Cell Technologies) was used to lineage deplete cord blood cells. Antibodies to CD34, CD38, CD15, CD14, CD19, CD33, CD45, CD36, HLA-DR, CD11b, CD117, and CD3 were used to characterize primary AML samples and AML after transplantation into mice. All antibodies were obtained from Beckman Coulter and BD Biosciences. Flow Cytometry was performed on either a FACScalibur or LSRII (BD-Biosciences).

Transplantation of Cells into NOD/scid Mice and Colony Formation Assays

NOD/ShiLtSz-scid (referred to as NOD/scid) mice were bred at the University Health Network/Princess Margaret Hospital. Animal experimentation followed protocols approved by the University Health Network/Princess Margaret Hospital Animal Care Committee. NOD/scid mice 8-13 weeks old were pretreated with 2.75-3.4Gy and antiCD122 antibody before being injected intrafemorally with transduced AML cells at a dose of 200 to 2.87×10̂6 sorted cells per mouse, as previously described²³. Anti-CD122 antibody was purified from hybridoma cell line TM-b1 (generously provided by Prof T. Tanaka, Hyogo University of Health Sciences) and 200 ug injected i.p. following irradiation. Mice were sacrificed at 6.5 to 15 weeks (mean 10 weeks) and bone marrow from the injected right femur and opposite femur and, in some cases, both tibias as well as spleen, were collected for flow cytometry and secondary transplantation. Human engraftment was evaluated by flow cytometry of the injected right femur and non-injected bones and spleen. A threshold of 1% human CD45+ cells in bone marrow was used as positive for human engraftment. For each case, sort purity was integrated with the frequency of LSC in the other fractions in order to estimate LSC contamination and eliminate false positives (LSC+). Mice with greater than 50% CD19+ cells were labeled as normal human engraftment. The mean purity for each fraction was 98.3%. To eliminate false negative results (LSC−), the sensitivity of detection for each fraction was based upon the equivalent of unsorted cells injected (based upon the frequency of the sorted population). Each sorted fraction negative for LSC in vivo represented the equivalent of 6.58×10̂7 unsorted cells (mean). 5×10̂6 unsorted AML cells were confirmed to engraft mice for each sample. CD33 positivity was used to confirm the AML nature of the engraftment. Secondary transplantation was performed by intrafemoral injection of cells from either right femur or pooled bone marrow from primary mice into 1-3 secondary mice pretreated with irradiation and anti-CD122 antibody. For validation of cord blood HSC, 3×10̂3 to 1×10̂5 cells were injected intrafemorally per mouse and human engraftment determined by assessment of human CD45, CD19 and CD33 as previously described³³. Human CFC assays were done as previously described³³.

Microarray and Bioinformatics Analysis

RNA from cord blood or AML cells was extracted using Trizol (Invitrogen) or RNeasy (Qiagen). RNA was amplified before array analysis by either Nugen (NuGEN Technologies) or in vitro transcription amplification for AML and cord blood, respectively. The in vitro transcription method is an optimized version of the T7 RNA polymerase based RNA amplification published by Baugh et al⁷⁸. Human genome U133A and U133B arrays were used for cord blood and HT HG-U133A arrays for AML samples (Affymetrix). Data was normalized by RMA using either RMA Express ver. 1.0.4 or GeneSpring GX (Agilent). Clustering and heat maps were generated using MeV^(79, 80). LSC data was clustered using Pearson correlation metric with average linkage. HSC data was clustered using Pearson uncentered metric with average linkage. Gene Ontology (GO) annotation was performed using DAVID Bioinformatics Resources 6.7^(81, 82).

The LSC-R expression profile was generated by a comparison of gene expression in LSC fractions with those fractions without LSC. The HSC-R expression signature was derived from an ANOVA analysis of probes more highly expressed in HSC1 than all other populations as well as probes more highly expressed in HSC1 and HSC2 than other populations. qRT-PCR confirmation of HSC microarray expression was performed using an ABI PRISM 7900 sequence detection system (Applied Biosystems) and GAPDH to normalize expression.

Gene set enrichment analysis was performed using GSEA v2.0 with probes ranked by signal-to-noise ratio and statistical significance determined by 1000 gene set permutations^(34, 35). Gene set permutation was used to enable direct comparisons between HSC and LSC results (<7 replicates and >7 replicates, respectively). Median of probes was used to collapse multiple probe sets/gene. For the GSEA analysis of the 110 AML cohort by the LSC-R signature, an LSC-R gene set generated by FDR cutoff of 0.1 was used in order to have >100 probes . . . .

Differentially expressed genes were mapped to known and interologous protein-protein interactions (PPIs) in I2D (Interolog Interaction Database) v1.72 (http://ophid.utoronto.ca/i2d)^(36, 37), with additional updated PPIs (February 2010) from BioGrid (http://www.thebiogrid.org)⁸³, DIP (http://dip.doe-mbi.ucla.edu)⁸⁴, HPRD (v8; http://www.hprd.org)⁸⁵, IntAct (www.ebi.ac.uk/intact/⁸⁶) and MINT (mint.bio.uniroma2.it/mint/)⁸⁷. Experimental PPI networks were generated by querying I2D with the target genes/proteins to obtain their immediate interacting proteins, and their mutual interaction. Network visualization was performed using NAViGaTOR ver. 2.1.15 (http://ophid.utoronto.ca/navigator)^(37, 88).

Correlation with Clinical Outcome

All patients in the 160 AML cohort received intensive double-induction and consolidation therapy^(55, 89). 156 of these patients were enrolled in the AMLCG-1999 trial^(55, 89). Of the 163 samples, 3 were removed for being peripheral blood or MDS RAEB. Characterization and gene expression profiling of these cohorts is described in Metzeler et al. (GEO accession GSE12417)⁵⁵. The log 2 expression values for each sample were centered to zero mean. The sum of log₂ expression values of the HSC-R or LSC-R probe sets was used as the risk score for each patient. The 160 patients were split into high and low risk groups above and below the median risk score. These risk groups were assessed for prognostication of overall survival and event-free survival in univariate Cox analysis (logrank test) and in multivariate Cox analysis (Wald test). Similarly, the sum of log 2 expression of LSC-R or HSC-R FDR0.05 signature was used to rank the 110 AML cohort (subdivided by cytogenetic risk (GEO accession GSE6891 matrix1)), and chi-squared test applied to the top quartile of samples (highest expression sum). The “phenotypically determined stem cell signature” (FIG. 7 c) was derived from a comparison of AML CD34+/CD38− vs AML CD34+/CD38+ cells. This analysis included an additional 7 AML samples that were not included in the generation of the LSC-R data because they had not been functionally validated (Table 15).

Statistics

Frequency of LSC was determined with a limited dilution analysis and interpreted with the L-Calc software (StemSoft Software Inc). The lower estimate of frequency in cases without negative results was estimated using ELDA (WEHI—Bioinformatics Division)⁹⁰. The HSC-R signature was generated using oneway ANOVA analysis using Tukey HSD post-hoc test and Benjamini-Hochberg multiple testing correction (FDR 0.05) (GeneSpring GX software Agilent). The LSC-R signature was generated using a Smyth's moderated t-test with Benjamini-Hochberg multiple testing correction to compare fractions positive for LSC against fractions without LSC⁹¹. Fisher's exact test was used to determine correlation between LSC-R or HSC-R and complete remission.

Results:

AML LSC have Heterogeneous Surface Marker Profiles and Frequency

As an initial step to investigate the molecular regulation of LSC, primary human AML patient samples were fractionated into LSC-enriched and LSC-depleted populations to enable further analysis. A xenotransplant model, including the pretreatment of NOD/scid mice with an anti-CD122 antibody (to deplete residual natural killer and macrophage cell activity) and intrafemoral injection of cells, was previously shown to increase the sensitivity of engraftment and detection of stem cells^(18, 23, 24). Thus, 16 primary human AML samples were sorted into 4 cell populations each based upon surface expression of CD34 and CD38, followed by functional validation in this optimized xenotransplant assay (FIG. 5, see Table 7 for patient and sample data).

LSC were detectable in each of the four CD34/CD38 AML fractions as determined by human engraftment (≧1% human cells, 8+ weeks after injection) (FIG. 5, Table 8). As expected, LSC were observed in the CD34+/CD38− fraction in each informative case but one; in addition, LSC were also detected in other fractions in the majority of AML samples. The LSC were able to engraft secondary mice, a test of long term self renewal, irrespective of marker profile (Table 9). Additionally, the immunophenotype of the leukemic graft in mice was similar to the primary patient sample and the linear relationship between the number of LSC transplanted and level of human chimerism was the same regardless of the marker profile of the transplanted cells (FIG. 9, 10). This indicates that LSC from different fractions are functionally indistinguishable and can be treated equally in gene expression analysis. In those fractions where LSC were detected the frequency varied from 1/1.6×10³ to 1/1.1×10⁶ cells, as determined by limiting dilution analysis (LDA) in vivo, and was generally highest in the CD34+/CD38− fraction (Table 8). In ten cases the LDA analysis was repeated and the results were highly consistent among replicates. Further, an estimate of the absolute number of LSC contributed by each fraction revealed that the majority of LSC are in the minor CD34+/CD38− fraction in 50% of the patients, and in the CD34+/CD38+ fraction in the other 50% (Table 10, 11). Thus, using an optimized xenograft model, it can be concluded that AML LSC represent a minor population that can be reproducibly purified and they are able to self-renew and re-establish the AML hierarchy in xenograft models. Collectively, these data provide strong evidence that AML is organized as a hierarchy that follows a CSC model.

Transcription Profiling of Functionally Defined LSC

To gain insight into the molecular regulation of LSC, each of the functionally validated fractions derived from all 16 primary human AML samples were subjected to global gene expression analysis (FIG. 5). Two assumptions were made. First, that an LSC specific transcriptional profile will contain at least some genes that govern the stem cell state. Second, that comparison of closely related cell fractions that differ only by the absence or presence of LSC will reveal LSC specific gene expression even though the actual LSC frequency remains relatively low. There is ample precedence for both assumptions from many gene expression studies of normal HSC, where subsequent studies have proven the HSC specific function of the differentially expressed genes²⁵⁻²⁸. Since the goal was to generate an LSC-related gene profile (LSC-R) bioinformatic analysis was undertaken to compare global gene expression of the 25 LSC enriched fractions with the 29 fractions in which LSC were absent (Table 12 for top 80 array probe list). The LSC-R signature, comprised of genes more highly expressed in LSC enriched populations, with a false discovery rate (FDR) of 0.05, consists of 42 genes (48 probes sets) (probe sets listed in Table 5 and genes listed in Table 6). This represents a common signature, as it was generated from AML samples that possessed a variety of karyotypic alterations and FAB subtype. Prior reports of LSC specific gene expression used simple comparisons of LSC to HSC²⁹⁻³¹, phenotypically defined cell populations (where both may have contained LSC as the data herein establishes)³² or used a small patient cohort⁵. Comparison of both the LSC-R and a normal HSC signature (described below) with prior work,^(2, 31, 32, 35) is shown in Example 7. By contrast, the approach taken here resolves these problems by focusing the analysis only on a large number of functionally validated LSC-enriched versus non-LSC AML populations resulting in the identification of a novel LSC-specific gene signature (probe sets listed in Table 5, genes listed in Table 6).

Functionally Defined HSC Related Transcription Profiles

LSC and HSC both possess canonical stem cell functions such as self renewal and maturation processes that result in progeny that lack stem cell function¹. However it is not known if human LSC utilize molecular mechanisms also employed by HSC or if they are governed through unique pathways. If gene expression programs are shared between LSC and HSC, there is a high likelihood that some will govern common stem cell functions, and such a comparison provides the first step in their identification To determine the gene expression profile of HSC, gene expression in human cord blood CD34+/CD38− (HSC1), CD34+/CD38lo/CD36− (HSC2), and CD34+/CD38+ (progenitor) cells as well as lineage positive (mature) cells were examined (FIG. 11). It has been previously reported that the HSC2 fraction contains a lower frequency of HSC than HSC1 and a novel class of repopulating cells termed R-SRC³³. An HSC-related profile (HSC-R) was generated based on transcript enrichment in HSC fractions (FIG. 5 a, FIG. 11, Table 14). The HSC and progenitor enrichment in each fraction was validated by in vitro colony formation and in vivo xenograft assays (FIG. 11). The HSC-R signature of genes with higher expression in HSC fractions (FDR 0.05) consists of 121 genes (147 probes sets (Table 14). The differential expression of 19 genes was validated by qRT-PCR (FIG. 12) In order to facilitate gene ontology (GO) analysis, larger lists using an FDR cutoff of 0.10 were also used: an FDR0.1 HSC signature is enriched in 63 GO categories, including the 5 GO categories in which the FDR0.10 LSC signature is enriched.

LSC Express an HSC Gene Expression Profile

The LSC-R and HSC-R gene expression profiles were examined for common expression patterns. Gene Set Enrichment Analysis (GSEA), a threshold-free method of comparing gene expression between independent datasets, was used to compare the expression profiles and found enrichment of the HSC-R gene signature in the LSC-R profile (p<0.001) (FIG. 6A top panel, 6B)^(34, 35). Conversely, the LSC-R signature was found to be enriched in the HSC-R expression profile (p<0.001) (FIG. 13). Forty-four leading edge genes termed the “core enriched HSC/LSC” genes (CE-HSC/LSC), drive the GSEA enrichment of the HSC-R signature in the LSC gene expression data and represent HSC genes that are also differentially expressed in LSC; of these 18 have previously been implicated in stem cell regulation, oncogenesis, or both, including ABCB1(MDR1), MEIS1, ERG, HLF, EVI1 and homeobox genes (FIG. 6B; see Example 8 for a complete description of these genes). A subset is included in Table 13.

To identify the core pathways that these genes might predict, a stem cell protein-protein interaction network from the CE-HSC/LSC genes was generated, consisting of direct protein-protein interactions as well as proteins that link CE-HSC/LSC proteins using the I2D protein interaction database^(36, 37). The full network is available in NAViGaTOR 2.0³⁷ XML file format at http://www.cs.utoronto.ca/˜juris/data/NatMed10/. Further, a gene list as well as protein network representing more highly expressed genes common to normal lineage-committed progenitors was generated. The CE-HSC/LSC protein interaction network shows significant enrichment of multiple pathways separate from the progenitor network, including Notch and Jak-STAT signaling, which are implicated in stem cell regulation, thereby supporting the stem cell nature of the HSC and LSC-related gene profiles³⁸⁻⁴⁴. To gain further insight into the gene expression programs preferentially active in LSC, this data was compared with previously generated human and murine gene sets derived from stem, progenitor and mature cell populations as well as embryonic stem cells (ESC)^(25, 28, 45-51). In a comparison of gene expression between LSC and non-LSC fractions by GSEA, LSC-R gene expression positively correlated with pre-existing primitive cell gene sets such as HSC genes and genes shared between HSC and lineage-committed progenitor cells, and negatively correlated with gene sets derived from more differentiated cells such as late lineage-committed progenitor and mature blood cells (FDR q≦0.05; see Example 9 for further description)^(25, 28, 45). As well, the normal common lineage-committed progenitor-related gene list negatively correlated with genes more highly expressed in LSC fractions than with non-LSC (p<0.001) (FIG. 6A bottom panel). In a similar analysis, LSC were not enriched for ESC modules or ESC gene expression sets compared to non-LSC, unlike what was previously observed for murine MLL-induced leukemia LSC⁴⁶⁻⁵² (FDR q>0.05). Thus, an HSC expression program, and not a common lineage-committed progenitor or ESC expression pattern, is preferentially expressed in LSC compared to more mature leukemic cells.

LSC and HSC Gene Expression Signatures Predict Outcome of Leukemia Patients

To investigate whether there is a correlation between these LSC-R and HSC-R gene signatures and clinical outcomes in AML patients, a pre-existing set of AML gene expression profiles were interrogated⁵³⁻⁵⁵. As discussed later, this approach assumes that, since a hallmark of AML is altered growth and blocked differentiation, some components of stem cell gene expression programs will persist in leukemic blasts. In their study, Valk et al. examined global gene expression in leukemic blasts from 285 AML patients and identified 16 distinct groups by unsupervised cluster analysis⁵³. In general, clustering was driven by the presence of gross chromosomal alterations and known point mutations. When the genes that define each cluster were examined in the LSC-R and HSC-R profiles, a significant enrichment for a number of clusters was found. Generally, the LSC-R and HSC-R profiles produced similar results in the enrichment of the clusters and correlated positively with clusters characterized by FLT3-ITD or EVI1 over-expression, molecular markers that indicate a poor prognosis^(53, 56-58). They correlated negatively with clusters that have good prognosis, including karyotypes such as t(15;17) and inv(16) although 11q23 MLL was also in this group⁵³. Recently, 110 of these AML samples were stratified into ‘poor’ or ‘good’ prognostic risk groups, based upon cytogenetic alterations, and new gene expression data was generated⁵⁴. Higher expression of the LSC-R or HSC-R signatures was able to predict poor prognostic risk patients in this data set (p=0.0125 and p=0.001 respectively). Further, enrichment analysis identified subsets of LSC-R and HSC-R genes that correlate with poor cytogenetic risk groups (FIG. 14). This subset of the HSC-R signature has considerable overlap with the shared CE-HSC/LSC gene list (21 of 32 genes) (FIG. 6 c, 14). Overall, these findings support the validity of the stem cell expression profiles and demonstrate that AML with worse prognosis express stem cell-related genes more highly than less aggressive AML samples. Furthermore, they establish the feasibility of using an LSC or HSC signature as a biomarker to stratify patients through analysis of their bulk blast populations.

To validate the clinical relevance of stem cell gene expression in leukemia, a second cohort of 160 cytogenetically normal (CN) AML patients were examined for whom gene expression and outcome data was available⁵⁵. CN AML represents approximately 45% of all AML subtypes and is an intermediate risk category^(57, 58). The LSC-R or HSC-R gene signature was used to divide these patients into 2 equal groups based upon the median expression of the respective signature in bulk AML bone marrow cells. There was significant negative correlation between the rate of complete remission and high expression of the LSC-R signature (p=0.0054, n=158), while negative correlation with the HSC-R signature approached significance (p=0.073, n=158). Both signatures negatively significantly correlated with overall survival (LSC p=5.2×10̂−6, HR=2.4 (95% Cl 1.6-3.6); HSC p=1.8×10̂−5, HR=2.3 (95% Cl 1.6-3.4)) (FIG. 7 a) and event-free survival (LSC p=2.5×10̂−7, HR=2.5 (95% Cl 1.8-3.7); HSC p=8.9×10̂−6, HR=2.2 (95% Cl 1.5-3.2)) (FIG. 7 b). It is noteworthy that a signature generated using phenotypic stem cell markers alone without functional determination of LSC fractions was not prognostic (p=0.81, HR=1, Table 15), supporting the requirement for functional validation of LSC populations (FIG. 7 d). Thus, this data demonstrates that high expression of stem cell expression signatures directly predict patient survival in CN AML and, therefore, variation in stem cell expression programs among patients is highly correlated to heterogeneity in disease outcome.

CN AML patients lack gross genomic changes making it difficult to identify a prognostic biomarker. However, there has been much effort to use mutational status of specific genes to determine prognosis⁵⁷⁻⁶¹. Recently, FLT3ITD status and NPM1 mutational status have been combined to designate low molecular risk (NPM1mut FLT3ITD−) (LMR) and high molecular risk (FLT3ITD+ or NPM1wt FLT3ITD−) (HMR) groups^(57, 60, 61). Patients with LMR AML, who generally account for approximately 35% of CN-AML, have favorable prognosis and are offered standard treatment, however there is still heterogeneity in outcome^(57, 60, 61). Multivariate analysis was used to demonstrate that the LSC-R and HSC-R signatures could predict outcome independently of known molecular prognostic factors such as molecular risk status and CEBPA (FIG. 8) (See Example 10 for an analysis with FLT3 and NPM1 as independent factors)^(57, 60-62). Subdividing the 160 CN AML cohort by molecular risk status, it was observed that each stem cell signature identified patients with worse survival in both the HMR subset (LSC-R p=0.003, HR=1.9 (95% Cl 1.2-2.9); HSC-R p=0.00023, HR=2.2 (95% Cl 1.4-3.4)) and the LMR subset (LSC-R p=0.0033, HR=4.5 (95% Cl 1.5-13); HSC-R p=0.021, HR=3.3 (95% Cl 1.1-9.7)) (FIG. 8). Patients with high LSC-R signature represented only 25% of the LMR group and yet accounted for approximately 50% of the LMR patients that did not survive. As the patients in the LMR group were considered to have favorable prognosis, approximately only 10% of the patients in this cohort received a bone marrow transplant. Thus, the LSC-R and HSC-R signatures can be used to stratify patients currently identified as low risk into those who do well with standard therapy and those who could benefit from more intensive therapy, including stem cell transplant.

To determine the robustness of the clinical correlation, the prognostic value of the LSC-R signature was examined in an additive analysis (FIG. 7 c). Starting with the highest ranked LSC probe in the LSC-R gene expression profile, the correlation with outcome was determined (as measured by p value, Table 16) after successive addition of each ranked probe. Correlation with overall survival was greatest with the top 35 probes. Beyond that, the correlation decreased but was still significant at 1000 probes (p=0.04). These findings indicate that the stem cell profile is consistently of prognostic significance and that this correlation is not driven by a single, or very few, genes or pathways. Collectively, these data provide strong evidence that stem cell properties influence patient survival outcomes.

Discussion

This data provides human HSC and LSC-specific gene expression signatures derived from multiple sorted cell fractions where both HSC and LSC content was contemporaneously assayed by in vivo repopulation. LSC and HSC share a core transcriptional program that, when taken together, reveals components of the molecular machinery that govern stemness. Since both signatures show strong prognostic significance predicting AML patient outcome, the data establishes that determinants of stemness influence clinical outcome. These findings have two important implications on the role of stem cells in cancer. First, the firm linkage between LSC and HSC signatures and the ability of these signatures to predict survival, a seminal cancer property, provide strong evidence that LSC defined on the basis of functional stem cell properties are distinct and clinically relevant cells present in the leukemic clone. Although the validity of the CSC model continues to be contested for many tumour types, this data supports the contention that LSC are discrete cell types and not artifacts of experimental xenograft models or clinically unimportant^(17, 20, 63-66). Second, the approach that has been taken in AML provides a paradigm for assessing both the identity and clinical relevance of LSC and CSC from other leukemias and solid tumours, respectively. A well validated and sensitive xenograft assay is essential since only functionally validated populations showed clinical relevance, while signatures derived from phenotypically defined populations did not. Furthermore, the finding of LSC clinical relevance predicts that therapies targeting LSC should improve survival outcomes and that xenograft models based on primary AML engraftment should be used for preclinical evaluation of new cancer drugs.

The identification of shared transcriptional profiles in LSC and HSC strongly predicts that these components of the molecular machinery must play a role in the establishment and maintenance of the stem cell state. Indeed biological studies have clearly established that LSC and HSC share a number of properties including quiescence, niche dependence, and self renewal¹. Although this study was not designed to determine the mechanism whereby these genes govern the stem cell properties, it can be inferred that many must have an important role. Genes such as EVI-1, MEIS1, HOXB3, and ERG as well as the pathways identified from network analysis are well known as critical regulators of normal murine and/or human HSC function⁶⁷⁻⁷⁰. Moreover, many genes such as EVI-1, ERG, FLT3 and BAALC are also associated with poor prognosis in AML^(58, 71). As each is present in the shared stem cell gene profile, it is speculated that their value as a highly significant prognostic indicator derives from their role in governing stem cell function. Collectively, the identification of so many (eighteen) known stem cell and leukemia genes within the transcriptional profile provides confidence that many of the remaining genes not previously associated with the stem cell state are indeed functionally relevant in human LSC and HSC. The shared stem cell profile also adds to the discussion and controversy regarding the cell of origin for AML and whether LSC derive from the transformation of HSC or committed progenitors^(1, 16, 72-75). GSEA showed that LSC were only enriched for HSC programs and not from progenitor or embryonic cell programs, pointing to their close relationship.

The prognostic value that was found in the LSC and HSC signatures is of significant clinical importance in a disease like AML where a large proportion of patients are cytogenetically normal. Gross genomic changes (e.g. chromosomal translocations) cannot be used to guide therapy, but the mutational status of a small number of genes is now widely employed to stratify LMR patients toward less aggressive treatment compared to HMR patients^(57, 60, 61). It is particularly noteworthy that the LSC signature clearly identified a large subset (45%) of patients in the LMR group that had poor long term survival. Such patients might benefit from more aggressive therapy. It is somewhat counterintuitive that an LSC/HSC signature should be present in the leukemia blasts (i.e. non-LSC) of a patient with poor outcome. It is possible that the higher expression of a signature simply reflects a higher proportional content of LSC, as suggested previously¹², and such cells are harder to eradicate making patient survival shorter. However even in the peripheral blood of AML patients with the highest frequency of LSC only 1 in 500 to 1000 cells is an LSC making it highly unlikely their gene expression was detected. Alternatively, it is well known that as normal HSC maturation occurs there is an essential substitution of stem cell functions (including self renewal, quiescence, DNA damage response, apoptosis) by differentiation programs. In AML, differentiation is perturbed and abnormal but also highly variable between genetic and morphological subtypes⁷⁶. Additionally, human and murine studies have clearly shown that the self renewal capacity of LSC is abnormal resulting in massive LSC expansion compared to normal HSC^(1, 64, 77). It is speculated that there is similar variation in the uncoupling of stem cell functions and maturation programs. This data argues that when this dissociation is poor the stem cell programs will persist in bulk leukemia blasts, while in other samples there is a more rigid demarcation between the LSC and non-LSC similar to normal HSC development. The reason the blasts in the former example lack actual LSC function is that any individual blast will only possess a limited repertoire of the full program but since RNA is collected from a large cell dose the full program will be uncovered. If this explanation is correct the greater retention of residual stem cell properties in all cells of the leukemic clone is reflective of an LSC whose stem cell properties are more deregulated resulting in disease progression, treatment failure and shortened survival. More broadly, this data points to the importance of developing LSC biomarkers to contribute to personalized cancer therapy and the need to identify therapeutic targets that will target all leukemic cells in the clone including the LSC.

Example 7

The relationship of the LSC-R and HSC-R gene profiles to previously elucidated human LSC-associated gene expression data was examined. Four previous studies assessed LSC global gene expression. These involved either a comparison of LSC to HSC (AML vs normal, CD34+/CD38− cells)^(55, 56) or LSC to more differentiated AML cells in small patient cohorts (AML CD34+/CD38− vs CD34+/CD38+ cells)^(57, 58). In one latter case, the LSC nature of each fraction was not functionally validated⁵⁸ and, as shown here and as others have shown, the use of CD34 and CD38 to identify stem cell fractions without concomitant functional analysis can mislabel the stem cell nature of sorted cell fractions.

First, of the studies that compared LSC-enriched populations to non-stem cell enriched AML cells, no correlation with the LSC list generated by Gal et al based upon phenotypically defined populations (AML CD34+/CD38− vs CD34+/CD38+ cells)⁵⁸ was found. FIG. 15 a-b). As there was no functional validation, the phenotypically determined non-LSC (CD34+/CD38+) samples likely included LSC in some patients, compromising the data analysis. However, there was a negative correlation of the genes underrepresented in LSC with both the LSC-R and HSC-R data sets. This suggests that the CD34+/CD38+ cell fractions included a mixed population, resulting in higher expression of genes linked to maturation than in the CD34+/CD38− population. In the second study of LSC to non-LSC AML populations, Ishikawa et al. used a cohort of 4 samples with 2 populations each to identify a small number of genes⁵⁷. In this case, there is some correlation with LSC-R and HSC-R although, critically, the LSC-R does not positively correlate with their LSC up regulated gene set nor does HSC-R negatively correlate with their down regulated LSC gene set (FIG. 15 a-b). This suggests that while this study was successful in identifying some LSC-related stem cell genes, it was limited by small sample size and the gene expression variability inherent in cancer samples.

The LSC-R and HSC-R gene expression data here was then compared with the gene sets identified in the two studies that contrasted the gene expression of LSC-enriched populations (AML CD34+/CD38− cells) with HSC-enriched populations (normal CD34+/CD38− cells)^(55, 56). While a comparison of gene expression of LSC against HSC may identify genes deregulated in LSC, it does not take into account the expression of leukemia associated genes that are independent of the stem cell nature of the populations. When applied to the LSC-R and HSC-R data, the results are the same: in both cases, the genes more highly expressed in LSC vs HSC were negatively correlated with the LSC-R and HSC-R stem cell related expression data while the genes with lower expression in LSC vs HSC were positively correlated with the LSC-R and HSC-R stem cell related expression (FIG. 15 c-d) AML cells aberrantly express mature cell markers, even in the primitive cell population, and therefore also likely express multiple mature cell gene expression programs, even at only a low level. Thus, the list of genes with higher expression in LSC vs HSC likely includes genes normally highly expressed in mature cells that are aberrantly expressed in the AML CD34+/CD38− population. These gene lists are therefore found to correlate with the non-LSC and non-HSC genes in the LSC-R and HSC-R stem cell profiles developed here as they are generally highly expressed in differentiated cells. For example, the LSC list by Saito et al., contains genes expressed in more mature cells such as MPO, CD93, CD97, CD24, and HCK⁵⁶. This analysis supports the experimental design of Saito et al as one aim was to identify surface markers uniquely expressed in LSC and not HSC. Further, as the frequency of stem cells is substantially higher in the CD34+/CD38− compartment of normal cord blood and bone marrow compared to AML, it is not surprising that a comparison of these populations would identify stem cell genes as more highly expressed in the normal HSC population than the equivalent LSC population, as occurred in these two studies. Thus, these results indicate that the comparison of gene expression in LSC-enriched populations with HSC-enriched populations, as carried out in these two studies, succeeded in identifying genes aberrantly expressed in LSC. Critically, however, this strategy resulted in exclusion of most of the common stem cell genes as LSC-related genes.

Overall, these analyses establish the necessity in CSC gene expression studies to functionally validate each stem cell population in a sensitive xenograft model. Further, they highlight the requirement to compare CSC populations against non-CSC cancer populations, as opposed to CSC vs normal populations, when the goal of the study is to provide insight into the entire stem cell-related gene expression program present in CSC.

Example 8

The HSC-R genes enriched in GSEA analysis of the LSC expression profile (CE-HSC/LSC) represent a group of stem cell related genes that are active in both stem cell populations compared to their respective non-stem cell fractions (FIG. 6 d). Approximately half of these genes (18/44) have been implicated in stem cell function or leukemogenesis, or both (eg. EVI1):

ABCB1 (ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 1; MDR1) acts as a drug transport pump and imparts a multidrug resistant phenotype to cancer cells^(1, 2). Further, the high expression of ABCB1 in stem cells provides a mechanism for the high efflux of dyes, which can be used to isolate a ‘side population’ of cells that are enriched for stem cells^(3, 4). Additionally, ABCB1 expression negatively correlates with treatment response in leukemia⁵.

ALCAM (activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule; CD166) is a cell surface molecule identified as a marker for the enrichment of colon cancer stem cells⁶. ALCAM has been implicated in cancer; for example, increased expression of ALCAM is a prognostic marker for poor outcome in pancreatic cancel^(7, 8).

BAALC (Brain and acute leukemia gene, cytoplasmic) was identified in an attempt to isolate genes differentially expressed in AML+8 compared to cytogenetically normal AML⁹. High expression of BAALC correlates with poor outcome in leukemia^(10, 11). BAALC is preferentially expressed in CD34+ primitive cells and expression is down-regulated upon cell differentiation¹².

BCL11A (B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11A (zinc finger protein)) is implicated in leukemogenesis as a target of chromosomal translocations of the immunoglobulin heavy chain locus in B-cell non-Hodgkin lymphomas¹³.

DAPK1 (Death-associated protein kinase 1) is a serine/threonine kinase gene involved in regulating apoptosis¹⁴. Decreased expression of DAPK1 has been implicated in both inherited and sporadic chronic lymphocytic leukemia¹⁵.

ERG (Ets-related gene), a transcription factor required for normal adult HSC function, is rearranged in human myeloid leukemia and Ewing's sarcoma¹⁶⁻¹⁸. Additionally, over-expression of ERG is observed in leukemia and associated with poor patient outcome in AML with normal karyotype^(10, 19, 20).

EVI1 (Ecotropic viral integration site 1) is a nuclear transcription factor implicated in regulation of adult HSC proliferation and maintenance²¹. Excision of EVI1 in mice results in a decrease of HSC frequency while over-expression results in greater self-renewal. Additionally, EVI1 plays a role in leukemogenesis²². It is a target of translocation events in human leukemia, for example, generating the fusion protein RUNX-EVI1 as a result of t(3;21)(q26;q22). High expression of EVI1 is associated with poor patient outcome^(22, 23).

FLT3 (Fms-like tyrosine kinase 3; Stem cell tyrosine kinase 1, STK1; Flk-2) is a receptor tyrosine kinase expressed in primitive hematopoietic cells that has been implicated in the regulation of HSC^(16, 24-26). Mutation of FLT3 is a strong prognostic indicator in CN-AML associated with poor outcome²⁷⁻²⁹.

HLA-DRB4 (major histocompatibility complex, class II, DR beta 4) has been linked to increased frequency of leukemia. For example, it is a marker for increased susceptibility for childhood ALL in males³⁰.

HLF (Hepatic leukemia factor), a leucine zipper gene, is involved in gene fusions in human leukemia as well as acting as a positive regulator of human HSC^(31, 32).

HOXA5 (homeobox A5), along with HOXB2, HOXB3 and MEIS1 is a homeobox gene and is hypermethylated in leukemia³³. The hypermethylation of HOXA5 is correlated with progression of CML to blast crisis³⁴.

HOXB2 (homeobox B2) is a member of the HOX gene family. Increased HOXB2 expression is associated with NPM1 mutant CN AML, supporting a correlation between altered HOX expression and NPM1 mutation³⁵.

HOXB3 (homeobox B3) is expressed in a putative HSC cell population of CD34+ cells³⁶ and has been shown to regulate the proliferative capacity of murine HSC when mutated along with HOXB4³⁷. Furthermore, HOXB3 can induce AML in mice when expressed along with MEIS1³⁸.

INPP4B (inositol polyphosphate-4-phosphatase, type II, 105 kDa) has been implicated as a tumour suppressor gene, supported by the observation of common loss of heterozygosity of the INPP4B locus correlating with lower overall patient survival³⁹.

MEIS1 (Myeloid ecotropic viral integration site 1 homolog, Meis homeobox 1) is a homeobox gene that is highly expressed in MLL rearranged leukemias^(40, 41). It has been shown to transform hematopoietic cells when co-expressed with genes such as HOXB3, HOXA9 and NUP98-HOXD13 and acts to regulate LSC frequency in a murine MLL leukemia model^(38, 42-44). Further, it has recently been shown to regulate HSC metabolism through Hif-1alpha⁴⁵.

MYST3 (MYST histone acetyltransferase (monocytic leukemia) 3; MOZ) is a target of the t(8;16)(p11;p13) translocation commonly observed in M4/M5 AML⁴⁶. It is a transcriptional activator and has histone acetyl-transferase activity⁴⁶. As well, homozygous knockout of Myst3 resulted in HSC defects, indicating that it is the required for HSC function⁴⁷.

SPTBN1 (spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1) is a cytoskeletal protein identified as a fusion partner of FLT3 in atypical chronic myeloid leukemia⁴⁸.

YES1 (v-yes-1 Yamaguchi sarcoma viral oncogene homolog 1) is a member of the SRC family of kinases and, like SRC, is ubiquitously expressed. YES1 expression was shown to be enriched in murine HSC, ESC and NSC⁴⁹. YES1 is implicated in maintaining mouse embryonic stem cells in an undifferentiated state⁵⁰. Furthermore, YES1 was found to be amplified in gastric cancer⁵¹.

Example 9

Prior studies have generated normal human and murine hematopoietic gene signatures for populations enriched for stem, progenitor and mature cells. The overlap between the stem cell expression profiles shown here with 3 pre-existing stem cell expression sets available in the Molecular Signatures Database (MSigDB)⁵²⁻⁵⁴ using GSEA were examined. First, a human stem cell gene set, developed by Georgantas et al 2004, compared only CD34+ cells split into 2 populations consisting of stem cell enriched (CD34+/CD38− cells from bone marrow, cord blood and mobilized peripheral blood) and a progenitor enriched fraction (CD34+4/[CD38/Lin]+)⁵². This gene set (“HEMATOP_STEM_ALL_UP”) was enriched in both of the HSC-R and LSC-R expression profiles (FDR q<0.05), supporting the stem cell nature of the expression signatures described herein.

Next, a murine gene set representing genes more highly expressed in an HSC population than in a multipotent progenitor (MPP) population (Rhlo/Sca-1+/c-kit+/lin−/lo vs Rhhi/Sca-1+/c-kit+/lin−/lo) were examined⁵³. The MPP in this case represents a progenitor population that can generate both lymphoid and myeloid cells but not reconstitute beyond 4 weeks. This HSC vs MPP list (“PARK_HSC_VS_MPP_UP”) was enriched for in our LSC-R and HSC-R expression profiles (FDR q=0.03 and 0.04, respectively). This further supports the normal hematopoietic gene expression data and indicates that AML LSC preferentially express an HSC program, not an MPP program, compared to non-LSC stem cell populations.

Finally, the 24 murine gene sets generated by Ivanova et al. 2002 available in MSigDB were examined⁵⁴. These were generated by examining gene expression in murine stem cell, lineage committed progenitor and mature blood cells from both adult bone marrow and fetal liver and comparing multiple combinations of populations. In the case of adult bone marrow, both long-term and short-term HSCs were isolated (LT HSC and ST HSC, respectively). In general, the LSC-R and HSC-R profiles were enriched for gene sets from primitive cell populations and were negatively correlated with those derived from differentiated populations (“late progenitor” list and “mature” cell list). As expected, the HSC-R expression data correlated with the combined LT and ST HSC gene list (“HSC” FDR q=0.01) and weakly with the LT HSC list alone (FDR q=0.09). However, the HSC-R did not significantly correlate with the ST HSC gene set (FDR q=0.44). Since a ST HSC has not yet been isolated in the human system, this suggests two possible explanations, among others: that the ST HSC does not exist in humans or that the ST HSC gene expression program is unique and undetectable in our sorted population that contains all forms of human HSC. Examining the human LSC-R profile, there is enrichment of the genes in common to primitive cells (“HSC and progenitors”), a weak correlation with the murine LT HSC set (FDR q=0.14) but no correlation with the shared LT and ST stem cell (“HSC”) set (FDR q=0.45). This implies that LSC may preferentially express the gene programs expressed in murine primitive cells as well as, potentially, a subset of the programs specific for LT HSC, although these analyses may suffer from interspecies differences.

Overall, these analyses support the conclusion that HSC-related gene programs and not progenitor or mature gene programs are expressed in AML LSC compared to leukemic blast cells.

Example 10

The FLT3ITD mutation is a strong prognostic indicator of poor outcome in cytogenetically normal AML²⁷⁻²⁹. Multivariate analysis demonstrated that the LSC-R and HSC-R signatures could predict outcome independently of known molecular prognostic factors such as FLT3ITD status, NPM1 mutation and CEBPA (FIG. 16)²⁹. Subdividing the 160 AML cohort by FLT3ITD status, it was found that stem cell signature gene expression was able to identify patients with worse outcome in each subset. The LSC-R signature was able to predict patients with worse outcome in the FLT3ITD− patients (p=0.00035, HR 2.8 (95% Cl 1.6-5.2) but not as effectively in the FLT3ITD+ patients (p=0.15, HR 1.5 (95% Cl 0.87-2.6) (FIG. 15). Conversely, the HSC-R signature is able to identify patients with worse outcome in the FLT3ITD+ group (p=0.0013, HR 2.6 (95% Cl 1.4-4.9) and not as successfully in the FLT3ITD− subset (p=0.15, HR 1.6 (95% Cl 0.85-2.9) (FIG. 15). Thus, the stem cell gene signatures are prognostically significant independently of other common prognostic factors.

Example 11 Determination of a Threshold

The expression values and clinical outcome data for the a group of normal AML such as the 160 cytogenetically normal AML samples used in the primary study will be used as a test group in an analysis to determine the optimal threshold of expression for the stratification of new patients into poor or good prognostic groups in the clinic.

Example 12

Individuals who present or are suspected of having a hematological cancer will provide a blood sample. The white blood cell fraction will be tested for the expression of two or more genes listed in Tables 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14 or for example two or more CE-HSC/LSC genes such as those listed in tables 13 and 19. The expression values will be scaled (e.g. normalized) to a standard (e.g. using experimental controls) and then compared to a threshold value to determine poor or good prognosis prediction.

Example 13

A prognostic analysis as conducted as was done in FIG. 7A was repeated for a combination of 2 probe sets from the LSC signature genes. Expression levels were significantly correlated with overall survival in the 160 AML cohort. The p value is 0.0293 and the hazard ratio is 1.53. The porbesets were 214252_s_at and 212676_at. The gene expression levels detected by these probesets are CLN5 and NF1.

While the present disclosure has been described with reference to what are presently considered to be the preferred examples, it is to be understood that the disclosure is not limited to the disclosed examples. To the contrary, the disclosure is intended to cover various modifications and equivalent arrangements included within the spirit and scope of the appended claims.

All publications, patents and patent applications are herein incorporated by reference in their entirety to the same extent as if each individual publication, patent or patent application was specifically and individually indicated to be incorporated by reference in its entirety.

TABLE 1 LSC probe set (25) SEQ ID NO: 1-280

TABLE 2 LSC gene signature (25) Representative Gene Entrez Public ID NCBI Probe Set ID Symbol Gene Title Gene ID UniGene ID Accession 201242_s_at ATP1B1 ATPase, Na+/K+ 481 Hs.291196 BC000006 transporting, beta 1 polypeptide 201243_s_at ATP1B1 ATPase, Na+/K+ 481 Hs.291196 NM_001677 transporting, beta 1 polypeptide 201702_s_at PPP1R10 protein phosphatase 1, 5514 Hs.106019 AI492873 regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 10 204028_s_at RABGAP1 RAB GTPase activating 23637 Hs.271341 NM_012197 protein 1 205321_at EIF2S3 eukaryotic translation 1968 Hs.539684 NM_001415 initiation factor 2, subunit 3 gamma, 52 kDa 206582_s_at GPR56 G protein-coupled 9289 Hs.513633 NM_005682 receptor 56 207090_x_at ZFP30 zinc finger protein 30 22835 Hs.716719 NM_014898 homolog (mouse) 207836_s_at RBPMS RNA binding protein 11030 Hs.334587 NM_006867 with multiple splicing 208993_s_at PPIG peptidylprolyl 9360 Hs.470544 AW340788 isomerase G (cyclophilin G) 209272_at NAB1 NGFI-A binding protein 4664 Hs.570078 AF045451 1 (EGR1 binding protein 1) 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein 11030 Hs.334587 D84109 with multiple splicing 209488_s_at RBPMS RNA binding protein 11030 Hs.334587 D84109 with multiple splicing 211113_s_at ABCG1 ATP-binding cassette, 9619 Hs.124649 U34919 sub-family G (WHITE), member 1 212676_at NF1 neurofibromin 1 4763 Hs.113577 AW293356 212976_at LRRC8B leucine rich repeat 23507 Hs.482017 R41498 containing 8 family, member B 213056_at FRMD4B FERM domain 23150 Hs.709671 AU145019 containing 4B 214252_s_at CLN5 ceroid-lipofuscinosis, 1203 Hs.30213 AV700514 neuronal 5 215411_s_at TRAF3IP2 TRAF3 interacting 10758 Hs.654708 AL008730 protein 2 216262_s_at TGIF2 TGFB-induced factor 60436 Hs.632264 AL050318 homeobox 2 218183_at C16orf5 chromosome 16 open 29965 Hs.654653 NM_013399 reading frame 5 218907_s_at LRRC61 leucine rich repeat 65999 Hs.647119 NM_023942 containing 61 219871_at FLJ13197 hypothetical FLJ13197 79667 Hs.29725 NM_024614 220128_s_at NIPAL2 NIPA-like domain 79815 Hs.309489 NM_024759 containing 2 221621_at C17orf86 chromosome 17 open 654434 — AF130050 reading frame 86 41113_at ZNF500 zinc finger protein 500 26048 Hs.513316 AI871396

TABLE 3 HSC probe set Probe Set ID probe sequence Sequence ID No. 200672_x_at 5′-AAAGACTGCTGCTTCTGGAATTCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 281 200672_x_at 5′-AAGAAGCTGTCTGCGAAGTGGCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 282 200672_x_at 5′-AAGCAGGTCCTGGCACAATGTTTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 283 200672_x_at 5′-ACACATGGATCCAGGCTATCTCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 284 200672_x_at 5′-AGAGAAGCGGTTCAGCCTTTTTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 285 200672_x_at 5′-AGCGAGGTCCCTGTGAGTTTGAAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 286 200672_x_at 5′-CCTTCTCTTACCTTTTCAGTGAAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 287 200672_x_at 5′-CGCCATCTCCTCTGATAAACACGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 288 200672_x_at 5′-CTGTGCCTAATGTTCCTCAATGTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 289 200672_x_at 5′-GAACCAACACATTACTCTCTGTGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 290 200672_x_at 5′-GGCAATGAGTACCTCTTCCAAGCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 291 201889_at 5′-AAGCAGTATCTGTTATTTAGCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 292 201889_at 5′-AATACTTCCCTCAATTCTGTAAATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 293 201889_at 5′-AATTTAGTGATCAAACTGCCATTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 294 201889_at 5′-ATGACTTTATACCCAATTCTACATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 295 201889_at 5′-GATCTATCTTTTTTTGTTACCTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 296 201889_at 5′-GCCATTCACAGTGTAAGGCAGCACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 297 201889_at 5′-GGCAGCACTTAAATTTCGAACCTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 298 201889_at 5′-TTACCTTCAGATGTTCACTAAATAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 299 201889_at 5′-TTGACCCCAAATGACTTTATACCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 300 201889_at 5′-TTGGGATTTTTGGTGCTTATATGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 301 201889_at 5′-TTTGGAGTACTGTTTCTTCCTTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 302 202551_s_at 5′-ACCCATTTGTGCATTGAGTTTTCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 303 202551_s_at 5′-AGCACTTTTATACTAATTAACCCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 304 202551_s_at 5′-GAGCAGTCAGCATTGCACCTGCTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 305 202551_s_at 5′-GATACCCAGTATGCTTAACGTGAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 306 202551_s_at 5′-GATGGCAGTTCTTATCTGCATCACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 307 202551_s_at 5′-GCATTGCACCTGCTATGGAGAAGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 308 202551_s_at 5′-GCTCACTGGCCAGAGACATTGATGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 309 202551_s_at 5′-GGAAGTTTGTTGTAGTATGCCTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 310 202551_s_at 5′-GTAAATACTTGGACAGAGGTTGCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 311 202551_s_at 5′-GTTTTCAATTTGCTCACTGGCCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 312 202551_s_at 5′-TGGTAACTTTTCAAACAGCCCTTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 313 203139_at 5′-CAGAAGACCCCTGACTCATCATTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 314 203139_at 5′-CAGTCCCTTATAATTGGTGCATAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 315 203139_at 5′-CATTCCCTCTCATCTCAGGTAGAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 316 203139_at 5′-CCTCCTCCAGGGTGATTTTATGATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 317 203139_at 5′-CTCATCATTTGTGGCAGTCCCTTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 318 203139_at 5′-GATCCTGGTTTCATAACTTCCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 319 203139_at 5′-GATGGTTTCCACATTTAGATCCTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 320 203139_at 5′-TACACACTGTCATGCTTCATCATTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 321 203139_at 5′-TGATCAGTGTTGTTGCTCTAGGAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 322 203139_at 5′-TGTCCTAATTCTTCTGTCCTGAGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 323 203139_at 5′-TTTTCCGTTTGCTTTTGTTCCAATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 324 204069_at 5′-AAGCCTTACAGTTATCCTGCAAGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 325 204069_at 5′-ATAGTCCCACCTTGGAGCATTTATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 326 204069_at 5′-ATCAGCTGTTGCAGGCAGTGTCTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 327 204069_at 5′-CACCTTATACATCACTTCCTGTTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 328 204069_at 5′-CATCAAGCATCATTGTCCCCATGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 329 204069_at 5′-CGCCTAGGATTTCAGCCATGCGCGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 330 204069_at 5′-GAAGCCTAATTGTCACATCAAGCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 331 204069_at 5′-GAGCAAAGCATCGGTCATGTGTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 332 204069_at 5′-GCATGTCTAATTCATTTACTCACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 333 204069_at 5′-GTGTATTTTTTCATAGTCCCACCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 334 204069_at 5′-TCTTTCTTCTCGCCTAGGATTTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 335 204304_s_at 5′-AACCTACAGCATATTCTTCACGCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 336 204304_s_at 5′-AAGATTGGCCATGTTCCACTTGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 337 204304_s_at 5′-ACAATTCTTAGATCTGGTGTCCAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 338 204304_s_at 5′-ACAGATGCCAATTACGGTGTACAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 339 204304_s_at 5′-GAATTCCAGATGTAGGCATTCCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 340 204304_s_at 5′-GAGAAGATCCTGTCACAATTCTTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 341 204304_s_at 5′-GAGTGCAGCTAACATGAGTATCATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 342 204304_s_at 5′-GAGTTTGGTCCCTAAATTTGCATGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 343 204304_s_at 5′-GCGTAACTCCATCTGACAAATTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 344 204304_s_at 5′-TAGAGAAACCTGCGTAACTCCATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 345 204304_s_at 5′-TGCTTCAGGAGTTTCATGTTGGATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 346 204753_s_at 5′-AGTTCCTGGAATGGCACGTTGCTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 347 204753_s_at 5′-ATTTTAAGCCCTATCACTGACACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 348 204753_s_at 5′-CACTGACACATCAGCATGTTTTCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 349 204753_s_at 5′-CTGCCACAAAAATGTTCACTTCGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 350 204753_s_at 5′-GAATGGCACGTTGCTGCCAGTGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 351 204753_s_at 5′-GATGACGAATCCTGCTCTAAAATAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 352 204753_s_at 5′-GGCCCGCACGTTTTATGAGGTTGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 353 204753_s_at 5′-GGCTTGTGATGACGAATCCTGCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 354 204753_s_at 5′-GTCAGTTAACGTCACCCAAAAGCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 355 204753_s_at 5′-TATCGGTGCTATGTGTTTGGTTTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 356 204753_s_at 5′-TTATGACAGTATCGAGGCTTGTGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 357 204754_at 5′-AGTCCAAACCTTTATCTGTCTGTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 358 204754_at 5′-CAACACCACAAAGATCGCATCTGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 359 204754_at 5′-CAAGGCATGGGACCAGGCCTGCTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 360 204754_at 5′-CCACTGGCAAGGCCAAGGTCTCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 361 204754_at 5′-GAGCAAAGCCTTATCCGAATCGGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 362 204754_at 5′-GGATTTAGCACTGGGGTCTCAGCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 363 204754_at 5′-GGCCTGCTTGCCTATGTGTGATGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 364 204754_at 5′-GTCAATTAGAGCGATCCCAAGGCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 365 204754_at 5′-GTCTGAGACTAAGTGATCTGCCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 366 204754_at 5′-GTCTTTAATTTTGAGCACCTTACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 367 204754_at 5′-TCCTCCACGTTTTTTCTGCAATTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 368 204755_x_at 5′-AAGGTGTTCATTTTGTCACAAGCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 369 204755_x_at 5′-ATGAGCATCTCAAATGTTTTCTGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 370 204755_x_at 5′-ATGGCCGTATCAAATGGTAGCTGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 371 204755_x_at 5′-ATGGGATTTTCTAGTTTCCTGCCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 372 204755_x_at 5′-ATTTGAGCACTGGTCTCTCTTGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 373 204755_x_at 5′-CTCGTCAATCCATCAGCAATGCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 374 204755_x_at 5′-GCAATGCTTCTCTCATAGTGTCATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 375 204755_x_at 5′-GGACCATCCAAATTTATGGCCGTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 376 204755_x_at 5′-GGACGTAGAGTTGGCCTTTTTACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 377 204755_x_at 5′-TCCTGCCTTCAGAGTATCTAATCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 378 204755_x_at 5′-TTAATGATCTGGTGGTCTCCTCGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 379 204917_s_at 5′-ATGCATATTCAACACACTGCCTTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 380 204917_s_at 5′-CCAAGTCCTTTAACTCGTTGCAGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 381 204917_s_at 5′-CCAGTCCTTGGCTGTATCCATGTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 382 204917_s_at 5′-GAAATCCCCGGGAAGAGTTAGCCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 383 204917_s_at 5′-GAATTGCTGTCTAGCCTTAGTCAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 384 204917_s_at 5′-GAGTTAGCCTGGATAGCCTTGAAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 385 204917_s_at 5′-GTATCATGTATCTCTCTGTGGTGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 386 204917_s_at 5′-GTGGTGGTTCATTCCACAGGACGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 387 204917_s_at 5′-TAAGTACTTGGTCCCGTGGATGCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 388 204917_s_at 5′-TGAAAGTTGGGGCCCAGTCCTTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 389 204917_s_at 5′-TGGATGCTCTTTCAATGCAGCACCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 390 205376_at 5′-AAATCTCCTTCAAAATATCCAATCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 391 205376_at 5′-AAGCTGACACCTAAGTTTACCAACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 392 205376_at 5′-ACATGCTACAGCTGATGGCTTTCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 393 205376_at 5′-CAAGGACTTCTTTATCCGAGCGCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 394 205376_at 5′-CCGAGCGCTGGATTGCATGAGAAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 395 205376_at 5′-CTGGCTGCAACGATTTGCCGCAAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 396 205376_at 5′-GAATGGTATTCGTTTCACCTGTTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 397 205376_at 5′-GATGAGCACCAGTTACACAAGGACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 398 205376_at 5′-GATGCCTCCTGATTATATTTCACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 399 205376_at 5′-GTAGAAATTATGTGGCTGGCTGCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 400 205376_at 5′-GTCAGTGACACTTGAACAATGCTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 401 205984_at 5′-AAATATCTGATCTTACCCTGGGACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 402 205984_at 5′-AGATGACGCCTTTAGCTGATCTCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 403 205984_at 5′-ATCGTCAGCTGGAGCCGTACGAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 404 205984_at 5′-GAAACTGCAGCTTCTCCATAATTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 405 205984_at 5′-GAGGGAACTGGATTGGACCCTTCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 406 205984_at 5′-GCTGTGACAACACTGTGGTGCGCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 407 205984_at 5′-GGAATTCTGTTTGTCTGGTCTTTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 408 205984_at 5′-GTGCGCATGGTCTCCAGTGGAAAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 409 205984_at 5′-TAACCAACCCAGTGATTTACATGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 410 205984_at 5′-TCATACCAGTCAGTATTTCCCAGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 411 205984_at 5′-TTCATGGCCCGGCCCAGATGAAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 412 206385_s_at 5′-AAAGCCCTTCATCTAATATTTGTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 413 206385_s_at 5′-AAATGCTTGCCGCTTTAGAGGTGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 414 206385_s_at 5′-AAGCCAATCATTTGTAACCATTCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 415 206385_s_at 5′-ACCATACACTGGATGACCTAGTCGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 416 206385_s_at 5′-GCATTCATTGACACATAGCTCTAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 417 206385_s_at 5′-GCTAGTAGAATGGCAGCACGCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 418 206385_s_at 5′-GTAACCATTCTAGCAGTGTCATATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 419 206385_s_at 5′-GTAGACACCTTTCAGTAAGCCAATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 420 206385_s_at 5′-TATACGGTAGTTGCTTTAGGGGGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 421 206385_s_at 5′-TGGTGCTCATAAAAGGCCCCAGTCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 422 206385_s_at 5′-TTACTGTATTGTGTACTGGCTATAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 423 206478_at 5′-ACACACTCTTACTCCCGTGATGTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 424 206478_at 5′-AGTCAAAGGCTGATGTCCTGTTTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 425 206478_at 5′-ATTTGACCACGTCCATTGTTTCCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 426 206478_at 5′-CAAGCCATGGCAATATCTGTCCCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 427 206478_at 5′-CATCTACATCCATATCATGCCCATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 428 206478_at 5′-CATGCCCATGCATCTGTAACTTGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 429 206478_at 5′-GAGTTTGTTCAATGCATGTGTCTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 430 206478_at 5′-GTGATGTGTGTTAAGGGCTCCGATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 431 206478_at 5′-TGAATTTCTGCACGCTGTTGTCTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 432 206478_at 5′-TGTAACTTGCTTTTCCCGTGTAAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 433 206478_at 5′-TGTTTCCATCTTTTGGGCTGTTCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 434 206683_at 5′-AAAACCTTCCGAGTGAGCTCACATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 435 206683_at 5′-AACATGCAGCAGTTTTCAGTGGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 436 206683_at 5′-ACATCTTATTCGACACTTTAGAATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 437 206683_at 5′-AGAGCTCAAACCTTAGTCAACACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 438 206683_at 5′-AGCTCAAAACTTGCTAGGCATCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 439 206683_at 5′-GAACTCACATCTTATCAGGCATCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 440 206683_at 5′-GCTCAGATCTTACTAGACATCGGCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 441 206683_at 5′-GCTTTCAGGCACAGCTCAAAACTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 442 206683_at 5′-GCTTTGCAGAGAGCTCAGATCTTAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 443 206683_at 5′-GGAGAGCATTCAACCTGAACTCACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 444 206683_at 5′-TAGACATCGGCGAATTCACACTGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 445 208892_s_at 5′-ATGGCGAAGTCTTTAGTCTTTTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 446 208892_s_at 5′-ATTTGCAGCATGCTTGACTTTACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 447 208892_s_at 5′-CACTAAGACCTTGTTATGGCGAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 448 208892_s_at 5′-CGGACACTATTATCACTAAGACCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 449 208892_s_at 5′-GACTTTACCAATTCTGATGACATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 450 208892_s_at 5′-GATAATCTGGGAAAGACACCAAATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 451 208892_s_at 5′-GATGACATCTTTACGGACACTATTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 452 208892_s_at 5′-GTTGTCGCAAAGGGGATAATCTGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 453 208892_s_at 5′-TATGCCTTACCTTTGTAAATATTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 454 208892_s_at 5′-TGCTTGTGTTGTCGCAAAGGGGATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 455 208892_s_at 5′-TTAGTCTTTTTCATGTATTTTCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 456 209487_at 5′-AACTATTTCTTGGCGACCTTTGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 457 209487_at 5′-AATTAGATTTGTCTCTGGGAATGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 458 209487_at 5′-CTTTCACCAAAACTATTTCTTGGCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 459 209487_at 5′-GGAGCTCCCATGTTGAATTTGTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 460 209487_at 5′-GTGTTTCTCTCCTGAGGCAAAGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 461 209487_at 5′-GTGTTTGTAACATACCAACCTACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 462 209487_at 5′-TCTTGGCGACCTTTGAGAGATTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 463 209487_at 5′-TGTAACATACCAACCTACTGCAGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 464 209487_at 5′-TTGTCCACTTCTCCAGCAAATTAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 465 209487_at 5′-TTGTCTCTGGGAATGTGTTTGTAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 466 209487_at 5′-TTTTGTCCACTTCTCCAGCAAATTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 467 209560_s_at 5′-AATCTGGTGAACGCTACGCTTACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 468 209560_s_at 5′-CAAGTGCGAGACCTGGGTGTCCAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 469 209560_s_at 5′-GAGGAGATCTAAGCAGCGTTCCCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 470 209560_s_at 5′-GAGTTCCGCAGAGCTTACTATACGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 471 209560_s_at 5′-GTATCGTCTTCCTCAACAAGTGCGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 472 209560_s_at 5′-GTTCGCTATCTCTTGTGTCAAATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 473 209560_s_at 5′-TACTATACGCGGTCTGTCCTAATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 474 209560_s_at 5′-TCGACATGACCACCTTCAGCAAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 475 209560_s_at 5′-TGCAAAAACAATCCTCTTTCTCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 476 209560_s_at 5′-TGCGCTACAACCACATGCTGCGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 477 209560_s_at 5′-TGTCCTAATCTTTGTGGTGTTCGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 478 209993_at 5′-AAAGCGCCAGTGAACTCTGACTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 479 209993_at 5′-AACAACGCATTGCCATAGCTCGTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 480 209993_at 5′-AGCCACGTCAGCTCTGGATACAGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 481 209993_at 5′-CAAAGGAACTCAGCTCTCTGGTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 482 209993_at 5′-CAGCCTCATATTTTGCTTTTGGATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 483 209993_at 5′-GAGTGAGAGACATCATCAAGTGGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 484 209993_at 5′-GCCCTTGTTAGACAGCCTCATATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 485 209993_at 5′-GTCACTGCCTAATAAATATAGCACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 486 209993_at 5′-TCCTCAGTCAAGTTCAGAGTCTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 487 209993_at 5′-TCTGTTTAACATTTCCTCAGTCAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 488 209993_at 5′-TTTGGATGAAGCCACGTCAGCTCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 489 211597_s_at 5′-AAGCTATGTGTATCTTCTGTGTAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 490 211597_s_at 5′-AATGGTGTGGCTAGCATTTCCCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 491 211597_s_at 5′-ACTTCCTTGGAATATAGCTGCATTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 492 211597_s_at 5′-AGTCACTTTCCTTATGTATCATCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 493 211597_s_at 5′-CTTCCCTAAGTCACTTTCCTTATGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 494 211597_s_at 5′-GAAGCCTGTTGGGCCAGAAGACAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 495 211597_s_at 5′-GAAGGGAACACATTTCCTTCTGAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 496 211597_s_at 5′-GCAATCCAGGCCTCTGTTGAAAAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 497 211597_s_at 5′-TAAGTTTGCTTTTGACCATCACCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 498 211597_s_at 5′-TAATCCATTTAGCAATCCAGGCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 499 211597_s_at 5′-TCACCTCCCAGTAGCAATTTGCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 500 212071_s_at 5′-AAACCATTTGTATCTGGCATCACTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 501 212071_s_at 5′-AATTTTCATCTTACTGCACAATCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 502 212071_s_at 5′-ACATGCGGCTTTTCTGCATCAACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 503 212071_s_at 5′-GAGGCTGGGCCTGAACAGGGAGGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 504 212071_s_at 5′-GTGCTCAGTCGTACGACCTGTACCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 505 212071_s_at 5′-TAACACACGACATGCGGCTTTTCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 506 212071_s_at 5′-TAATTTGCTTCATTTCCTTGCTATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 507 212071_s_at 5′-TAGGAATGAACTCCAGAGGCTGGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 508 212071_s_at 5′-TCTAATGGTTACTTGCTCGTGCGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 509 212071_s_at 5′-TCTGGCATCACTTACTAACACACGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 510 212071_s_at 5′-TGCATTTCTCTGTCACTGTAACTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 511 212488_at 5′-AAAAGCCATAGCCGAGGACTGTCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 512 212488_at 5′-AACACCGCCAGCGTGGATTTTCCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 513 212488_at 5′-ACCACCAGAATGCAGTTCCAGCTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 514 212488_at 5′-CAGACCACTCTAGCCACAGTATATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 515 212488_at 5′-CCGTGGACTGCGTCTAGGTCATGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 516 212488_at 5′-CTCTGTGGTCCCTTCAAAGTTGTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 517 212488_at 5′-GAAAGGCGATCTCTTCACTGTGAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 518 212488_at 5′-GAGAGTCTCTGGAGCCCAGGATGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 519 212488_at 5′-GGATGCCAGCATGTGCCAATGACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 520 212488_at 5′-TGCCAATGACTGTCACCTTCATCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 521 212488_at 5′-TGGAAAGTAAGTCTCGCTCTTGCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 522 212750_at 5′-AAAATCTTCGCAGATCTTTGATATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 523 212750_at 5′-AAGGCCTGTGACAGAATTCGCTGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 524 212750_at 5′-ATGGGCATTGCAAGTGCCACCGTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 525 212750_at 5′-CCTGCTTCCCATGGGCATTGCAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 526 212750_at 5′-CTCCCCAACAGGTCTCTCTTGTTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 527 212750_at 5′-CTCCGCAATAATTCACCAGACCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 528 212750_at 5′-CTGCCCCAGGGCACATAAGAGCAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 529 212750_at 5′-GGATGACTCTGCAAAAGTGACCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 530 212750_at 5′-GTATACTGTATCAGCAGCTTTGTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 531 212750_at 5′-TAACTTGGGGATGGTCTCCCCTGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 532 212750_at 5′-TACTGAGGTAACTTCCACGTAGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 533 213094_at 5′-AATTCAGACTCTCTTTTCATTATGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 534 213094_at 5′-AGAGTCATAGTCTAGGATCCTGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 535 213094_at 5′-GATTGAGCCAAATTCTGTTGTCAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 536 213094_at 5′-GTTCTAAGCATGCAGTTCTCACCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 537 213094_at 5′-TAGCTAATTTGCCATTTTACTTAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 538 213094_at 5′-TAGCTGGGGAGCCTAAATTTAGTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 539 213094_at 5′-TCCTTTCTTAGCTTGATATTGCCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 540 213094_at 5′-TGTCACCATTCACTTGCATTGTAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 541 213094_at 5′-TTCTGTTGTCAGTTCTAAGCATGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 542 213094_at 5′-TTGATATTGCCTAGCTTTGTTGTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 543 213094_at 5′-TTTTCTTTGTCTGTTGTTGGCATAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 544 213510_x_at 5′-AATATCTAGTTCTCAGAGCATTTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 545 213510_x_at 5′-ACTTGTTGACAATGCACTGACTTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 546 213510_x_at 5′-ATATAAAATCTGTCCTTTCCTACCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 547 213510_x_at 5′-CTACTAATGTTGTTTGATCTGTGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 548 213510_x_at 5′-GATCTGTGTTTGTTATACTGGTTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 549 213510_x_at 5′-GGAGTGGCCTAAATTATCTAATGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 550 213510_x_at 5′-GGTTATCTTAAATGGCTACCTAAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 551 213510_x_at 5′-TAACCACATTCACCTTGTAAATGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 552 213510_x_at 5′-TGGCTACCTAAATTGAAATCCTTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 553 213510_x_at 5′-TTTATCTGTAACTGTTATCCAAACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 554 213510_x_at 5′-TTTCCTACCTGGACATGTCCCATTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 555 213844_at 5′-AAATAGCACATGCTCTTTGCCTCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 556 213844_at 5′-AGGTGACTTTCTGAAACTCCCTTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 557 213844_at 5′-AGTAGATCTGCTTTCTGTTCATCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 558 213844_at 5′-CCCTGGATGCGCAAGCTGCACATAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 559 213844_at 5′-CGTCCCTGAGTATCTGAGCGTTTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 560 213844_at 5′-CGTTACCTGACCCGCAGAAGGAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 561 213844_at 5′-GTTCATCTCTTTGTCCTGAATGGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 562 213844_at 5′-GTTTATTGCCATTATAGCGCCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 563 213844_at 5′-TAGCGGATCCCGCGTAGTGTCAGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 564 213844_at 5′-TCATGACAACATAGGCGGCCCGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 565 213844_at 5′-TCGTTGCCCTAATTCATCTTTTAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 566 218379_at 5′-AGCATAAATCCCCTTTTCAGGAAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 567 218379_at 5′-AGCCTTTAAGTGCTGCTTCTGTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 568 218379_at 5′-ATCCCATTTGAGGTATAAGTCACTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 569 218379_at 5′-CAGTGTTAGCATAAATCCCCTTTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 570 218379_at 5′-CCACAGCATTTGTACTGTTCCTTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 571 218379_at 5′-GAGCTTTACCCTAGTTGAACATACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 572 218379_at 5′-GATTTACACATACTGTTTCATTCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 573 218379_at 5′-GGAAGTTAAAATATCTCTACACGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 574 218379_at 5′-GTGACATGCTCTTGAGCTTTACCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 575 218379_at 5′-GTGCTGCTTCTGTCAGTCAAACGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 576 218379_at 5′-TTCAAAGTGCCCAGACTGTGTACAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 577 218723_s_at 5′-ACTGAATTCTCCAACAGACTCTACC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 578 218723_s_at 5′-CAGGCTCACCTTAAAATCAGCCCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 579 218723_s_at 5′-CCACTGTCACTCCTCAGAAAGCTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 580 218723_s_at 5′-GAACAGACGATCCATGCTAATATTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 581 218723_s_at 5′-GAAGCCTTCATTGCTGATCTTGACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 582 218723_s_at 5′-GAGGACCTGCTAAAATCAGCTACTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 583 218723_s_at 5′-GCTTCAGAAAGTTCCGAGGACCTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 584 218723_s_at 5′-GGACAAAGACGTGCACTCAACCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 585 218723_s_at 5′-TAGCAGTAAGCTTTCCCATTATAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 586 218723_s_at 5′-TCAGCTACTAGAATCTGCTGCCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 587 218723_s_at 5′-TCTGGGTCCTTTCATCATAAGGGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 588 218899_s_at 5′-AATGCATCTGGCTACTTTTTCATGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 589 218899_s_at 5′-ACAAGACTTTACCATACACGCAACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 590 218899_s_at 5′-ACTGGCATTACTCAGCAGGAGCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 591 218899_s_at 5′-AGAAACTAATCCTTACTATCCTATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 592 218899_s_at 5′-ATTAGGATACCACTTTTCATTGCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 593 218899_s_at 5′-CAAGTTCAAGGGCTCTTTCTCCCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 594 218899_s_at 5′-CTGCATCAGTTCACTGCTGCATGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 595 218899_s_at 5′-GAAACACTTTCTCACTTACAGGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 596 218899_s_at 5′-GGATTTCACGGAGACAGCAACCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 597 218899_s_at 5′-TGGCTTCTCTTTACAGCTTTGTTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 598 218899_s_at 5′-TTCATATGTCCCCACTGGCATTACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 599 218966_at 5′-AAGAATCCCAATTGCACCTTCTGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 600 218966_at 5′-ACTTTCGCTCTCTAATCAGCATTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 601 218966_at 5′-ATTGTGTCGGACCCTACTTTTGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 602 218966_at 5′-GCAACCTAAATTACTTTCGCTCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 603 218966_at 5′-GCACCTTCTGTTTCTGACAGTCACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 604 218966_at 5′-GCATCACCCTGCTAATACATAATAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 605 218966_at 5′-TAGTCTCTGGCCTGTGGATCCAGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 606 218966_at 5′-TCTTACCTGCCAACATATTCACCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 607 218966_at 5′-TGGATCCAGTGCTATTCTGTCACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 608 218966_at 5′-TGGGAACTGGCTATTCCTTGTCCCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 609 218966_at 5′-TTGATAAGCACTCCTAGTCTCTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 610 219497_s_at 5′-ATGGTGCTTTATATTTAGATTGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 611 219497_s_at 5′-ATTATTGCTTATGTGCCCTGTTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 612 219497_s_at 5′-ATTCCAGCATCTTACCTTCATATGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 613 219497_s_at 5′-GAAAGCCCGCTTTAGTCAATACTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 614 219497_s_at 5′-GAAAGCTGTTTGTCGTAACTTGAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 615 219497_s_at 5′-GGCAGTTGTCTGCATTAACCTGTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 616 219497_s_at 5′-GGCCTTTTCTATTCCTGTAATGAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 617 219497_s_at 5′-TATCTTTTACTATGGGAGTCACTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 618 219497_s_at 5′-TATGTAGTGTGCTTTTTGTCCCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 619 219497_s_at 5′-TATTTGTTTCTGGTCTTTGTTAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 620 219497_s_at 5′-TGTTATTGGCCTTTTCTATTCCTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 621 220416_at 5′-AAACCTCAGTTCTGTCACTTCTTAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 622 220416_at 5′-AAGTGATTCGGGCATATTTGTGTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 623 220416_at 5′-AGCTCAAATTTCAGTCCACATATGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 624 220416_at 5′-CAATGGTTTTTCTAACAACCTCAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 625 220416_at 5′-CATCATCCAGACCATTAATAGAATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 626 220416_at 5′-GAAATGTGAGAGAGGCTCGCCACTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 627 220416_at 5′-GAGGCTCGCCACTAAGTATTCTAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 628 220416_at 5′-GATACTCAGCTGTCATGTTTATAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 629 220416_at 5′-GCTCTCAGTCTGTGTCATGTAAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 630 220416_at 5′-TAGTTGCTTTTGATACTCAGCTGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 631 220416_at 5′-TTCAAAAAGCTCTCAGTCTGTGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 632 221841_s_at 5′-AAACTGCTGCATACTTTGACAAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 633 221841_s_at 5′-AAAGATCACCTTGTATTCTCTTTAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 634 221841_s_at 5′-AATCTATATTTGTCTTCCGATCAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 635 221841_s_at 5′-ATACCTGGTTTACTTCTTTAGCATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 636 221841_s_at 5′-ATCCGACTTGAATATTCCTGGACTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 637 221841_s_at 5′-CAGACAGTCTGTTATGCACTGTGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 638 221841_s_at 5′-GATGGTGCTTGGTGAGTCTTGGTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 639 221841_s_at 5′-GCCAAGGGGGTGACTGGAAGTTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 640 221841_s_at 5′-GGAAGACCAGAATTCCCTTGAATTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 641 221841_s_at 5′-GGTTTATTCCCAAGTATGCCTTAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 642 221841_s_at 5′-TTTTCTATATAGTTCCTTGCCTTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 643 222164_at 5′-AGAAAACACCTGTGAAGCTGGAGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 644 222164_at 5′-AGTTGACTTCCATCAGTGTTGAGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 645 222164_at 5′-ATAAGAAAATCTCCTTGTGGTGAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 646 222164_at 5′-CACTCATCGCTGTTCCGAACAAGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 647 222164_at 5′-GAATGTCTAAGTGAAGGGACCAGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 648 222164_at 5′-GAGATTGTTAAGCAGTTGACTTCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 649 222164_at 5′-GGTGTGTGCTGACTGGATTCAGAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 650 222164_at 5′-GGTTCAGAGACATGGGATCGTTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 651 222164_at 5′-TCCATCAGTGTTGAGCCAGGAATTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 652 222164_at 5′-TCGCTGTTCCGAACAAGTCAGCCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 653 222164_at 5′-TGAAGCTGGAGGTGACCATTCACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 654 226206_at 5′-AAACAGATCACATGTGGGCCCGTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 655 226206_at 5′-AAGAGATCCAGGTCTTTGCGTTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 656 226206_at 5′-AAGCACGGTGTGTTCTGCTTTTCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 657 226206_at 5′-AGACGAGGGACTCTTTGTCACGTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 658 226206_at 5′-CACCTAATTTATTGCCGTGCGTCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 659 226206_at 5′-GCCGGGGAAGCACGGTGTGTTCTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 660 226206_at 5′-GTGACTGCTTTTGTACCTTTGCAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 661 226206_at 5′-TGCGGCCACCACCTAATTTATTGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 662 226206_at 5′-TGTGCTACTTGGCAGTTCCATTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 663 226206_at 5′-TTCTTGGTGTCCACGTCTTGTGGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 664 226206_at 5′-TTTTGTGCTGCTTTTTATCATGATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 665 226420_at 5′-AAATAGCACTGTTCCAGTCAGCCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 666 226420_at 5′-AATGAAGTGTTCCCAACCTTATGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 667 226420_at 5′-ACTCCATATTTTATGCTGGTTGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 668 226420_at 5′-ACTGTATTCAGTTATTTTGCCCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 669 226420_at 5′-ACTTTATGACGTCTGAGGCACACCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 670 226420_at 5′-ATGGTGTTTGGCTTTTCTTAACATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 671 226420_at 5′-GCCTTTCAGTGCATTACTATGGGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 672 226420_at 5′-GTCAGCCACTACTTTATGACGTCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 673 226420_at 5′-GTTGTCTGCAAGCTTGTGCGATGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 674 226420_at 5′-TGAGGTACTTTCTTCAAATGCTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 675 226420_at 5′-TTTTGCCCTTTATTGAGGAACCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 676 229344_x_at 5′-AATGCACCGGTTTGGATTCAGGCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 677 229344_x_at 5′-ATAACTCCAACCTGTTTGATTCCGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 678 229344_x_at 5′-CTTCCCCCAATAATGCAGCTGTATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 679 229344_x_at 5′-CTTCTGCGTCTGTGAGGCCAATGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 680 229344_x_at 5′-GACTAAGATTCCTGCATTTTGACTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 681 229344_x_at 5′-GAGGCCAATGCAAATCCTTTTCAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 682 229344_x_at 5′-GATTTGACTGTGTGCTTTTTCAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 683 229344_x_at 5′-GTTTGATTCCGTCTGTTTTCTAAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 684 229344_x_at 5′-TCCCCCTTCCTGATGATGAGTGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 685 229344_x_at 5′-TGAGAACTTTCGGGGTCAGTGCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 686 229344_x_at 5′-TTTTTTGCTTACCCTCATCAACAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 687 235490_at 5′-CAGGAGTGCACGGCGCAGATGTATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 688 235490_at 5′-GATAACTTTAATCCTCACTTCTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 689 235490_at 5′-GCACATCAGTAAATATCTGCAGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 690 235490_at 5′-GTCGTTTGATAACTTTAATCCTCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 691 235490_at 5′-GTGCACGGCGCAGATGTATATACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 692 235490_at 5′-GTGGTTGCCCTCAGGATGGTATTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 693 235490_at 5′-TAATACAAATGGGCTCTTTGTTTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 694 235490_at 5′-TCTGCAGTCTTGTGCACATGGTGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 695 235490_at 5′-TTAATCCTCACTTCTCAGGAAACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 696 235490_at 5′-TTCTCAGGAAACATTGCACATCAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 697 235490_at 5′-TTGGTCTGTCGCCAAGGCAGGAGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 698 239328_at 5′-AAATGGTAGCAACAGACAGCCCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 699 239328_at 5′-AGCATGGAATTGTCTACGCCTTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 700 239328_at 5′-CTTTTGATTGGAATGCACTCCCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 701 239328_at 5′-GAAAGACCATCAATCCTGGGTTTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 702 239328_at 5′-GGAGGTGAACGTCTTTGTGGCTATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 703 239328_at 5′-GGTGAAAGTCGGCCTGTGAGTAACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 704 239328_at 5′-TAGGTTCAGGGTCAGTTACCAGCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 705 239328_at 5′-TCACCATTCTTTCCCATAAGGCTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 706 239328_at 5′-TCAGTTCCGTGCTCTGTAAAACCGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 707 239328_at 5′-TGCTTTACCTACCTTCCAAGGTTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 708 239328_at 5′-TTGTACATAAGCCCTACCTTTTGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 709 239451_at 5′-ACACCTATCCAGGACCTAGTTTCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 710 239451_at 5′-AGGATAGGGCAATCATTCCCAAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 711 239451_at 5′-ATTTTGTTGGAAGCTCCATTCCCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 712 239451_at 5′-CAGGACCTAGTTTCCATGACCATGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 713 239451_at 5′-CCCTTTTCTCATTGTCCATGTGATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 714 239451_at 5′-GAACGATGGCTGCTAACACCTATCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 715 239451_at 5′-GCTCCATTCCCAAAGCTTAACACTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 716 239451_at 5′-TAAACAGGACAGTTCCATGCAGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 717 239451_at 5′-TCCTTTGCCCACTTCTTAAATGTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 718 239451_at 5′-TTCTCCAAGTTAAGTTTCAGCCCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 719 239451_at 5′-TTTATGTAGTCTTATCCACTGCCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 720 241756_at 5′-AAACTTCTTAATTATGGAGGTACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 721 241756_at 5′-AAGAAGAAATCTTACCTTGCTCTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 722 241756_at 5′-AAGCCCATTTCTAATTGGTGATTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 723 241756_at 5′-AGAAATCTTACCTTGCTCTGTATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 724 241756_at 5′-ATGGAGGTACATCTCCAATACCTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 725 241756_at 5′-CATCCCCCTGTCAAAATGTTTGCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 726 241756_at 5′-GGCACACACTGTAGTTTCCTAAGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 727 241756_at 5′-GTACATCTCCAATACCTAAAATTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 728 241756_at 5′-GTATTGTCATTTAAGCCCATTTCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 729 241756_at 5′-GTTTCCTAAGCAGTTTGTTCTAATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 730 241756_at 5′-TTCACATCCCCCTGTCAAAATGTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 731 244447_at 5′-AAAGACCTCATACCATACCTGTAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 732 244447_at 5′-AATGGTAGTAGGTGTGCCTCTCTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 733 244447_at 5′-ATTGCCACTACTGTGAGGTTTGGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 734 244447_at 5′-CAGTTGCAGGTAGCTACTCTGGAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 735 244447_at 5′-CCTCTCTCCCATGAACGGATATCGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 736 244447_at 5′-GTCAGAACCCATAACAACAGGCCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 737 244447_at 5′-GTCTTAGTCCCCTTAATGGTAGTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 738 244447_at 5′-GTGTAGCTGAACTTCCTTAGTATCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 739 244447_at 5′-TCTTCTTAGCCAAATACTTCTCCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 740 244447_at 5′-TGCCGCACTCTTAGTTTTTTTGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 741 244447_at 5′-TTGATAATTTTCGTCTTAGTCCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 742 41577_at 5′-AACTCTGTATACTGTATCAGCAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 743 41577_at 5′-AATTCACCAGACCAGAAGCCACTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 744 41577_at 5′-ACACCCAGGAAAAGTCTGCAGACCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 745 41577_at 5′-ACATGTCCCTGGAGTTGCTTCCAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 746 41577_at 5′-ACTGTATCAGCAGCTTTGTGTAAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 747 41577_at 5′-ATGGGCATTGCAAGTGCCACCGTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 748 41577_at 5′-CACCAGACCAGAAGCCACTGGTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 749 41577_at 5′-CAGAAGCCACTGGTGTACAGAGAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 750 41577_at 5′-CCACTGGTGTACAGAGAACACTTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 751 41577_at 5′-CCCAAAGGGGGCACATGTCCCTGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 752 41577_at 5′-CGCAATAATTCACCAGACCAGAAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 753 41577_at 5′-CTTCCCATGGGCATTGCAAGTGCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 754 41577_at 5′-GAGGTAACTTCCACGTAGCCCCTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 755 41577_at 5′-GCCTGGCTCTGCACACCCAGGAAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 756 41577_at 5′-GCCTGTGACAGAATTCGCTGTTAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 757 41577_at 5′-TTTGATATCGTACTGAGGTAACTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 758

TABLE 4 HSC gene signature Entrez Representative Gene Public ID Probe Set ID Gene Symbol Gene Title ID UniGene ID NCBI Accession 200672_x_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 Hs.503178 NM_003128 201889_at FAM3C family with sequence similarity 3, member C 10447 Hs.434053 NM_014888 202551_s_at CRIM1 cysteine rich transmembrane BMP regulator 1 (chordin-like) 51232 Hs.699247 BG546884 203139_at DAPK1 death-associated protein kinase 1 1612 Hs.380277 NM_004938 204069_at MEIS1 Meis homeobox 1 4211 Hs.526754 NM_002398 204304_s_at PROM1 prominin 1 8842 Hs.614734 NM_006017 204753_s_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 Hs.196952 AI810712 204754_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 Hs.196952 W60800 204755_x_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 Hs.196952 M95585 204917_s_at MLLT3 myeloid/lymphoid or mixed-lineage leukemia (trithorax 4300 Hs.591085 AV756536 homolog, Drosophila); translocated to, 3 205376_at INPP4B inositol polyphosphate-4-phosphatase, type II, 105 kDa 8821 Hs.658245 NM_003866 205984_at CRHBP corticotropin releasing hormone binding protein 1393 Hs.115617 NM_001882 206385_s_at ANK3 ankyrin 3, node of Ranvier (ankyrin 6) 288 Hs.499725 NM_020987 206478_at KIAA0125 KIAA0125 9834 Hs.649259 NM_014792 206683_at ZNF165 zinc finger protein 165 7718 Hs.535177 NM_003447 208892_s_at DUSP6 dual specificity phosphatase 6 1848 Hs.298654 BC003143 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 Hs.334587 D84109 209560_s_at DLK1 delta-like 1 homolog (Drosophila) 8788 Hs.533717 U15979 209993_at ABCB1 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 1 5243 Hs.489033 AF016535 211597_s_at HOPX HOP homeobox 84525 Hs.654864 AB059408 212071_s_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 Hs.705692 BE968833 212488_at COL5A1 collagen, type V, alpha 1 1289 Hs.210283 N30339 212750_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 16B 26051 Hs.45719 AB020630 213094_at GPR126 G protein-coupled receptor 126 57211 Hs.715560 AL033377 213510_x_at LOC220594 TL132 protein 220594 Hs.462475 AW194543 213844_at HOXA5 homeobox A5 3202 Hs.655218 NM_019102 218379_at RBM7 RNA binding motif protein 7 10179 — NM_016090 218723_s_at C13orf15 chromosome 13 open reading frame 15 28984 Hs.507866 NM_014059 218899_s_at BAALC brain and acute leukemia, cytoplasmic 79870 Hs.533446 NM_024812 218966_at MYO5C myosin VC 55930 Hs.487036 NM_018728 219497_s_at BCL11A B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11A (zinc finger protein) 53335 Hs.370549 NM_022893 220416_at ATP8B4 ATPase, class I, type 8B, member 4 79895 Hs.511311 NM_024837 221841_s_at KLF4 Kruppel-like factor 4 (gut) 9314 Hs.376206 BF514079 222164_at FGFR1 fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 2260 Hs.264887 AU145411 41577_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 16B 26051 Hs.45719 AB020630 226206_at MAFK v-maf musculoaponeurotic fibrosarcoma oncogene homolog K 7975 Hs.520612 BG231691 (avian) 226420_at MECOM MDS1 and EVI1 complex locus 2122 Hs.719216 BG261252 229344_x_at RIMKLB ribosomal modification protein rimK-like family member B 57494 Hs.504670 AW135012 235490_at TMEM107 transmembrane protein 107 84314 Hs.513933 AV743951 239328_at — — — Hs.668429 AW512339 239451_at — — — Hs.658060 AI684643 241756_at — — — Hs.655362 T51136 244447_at — — — Hs.666767 AW292830

TABLE 5 LSC probe set (48) Probe Set ID probe sequence Sequence ID No. 201242_s_at 5′-AACCTACTAGTCTTGAACAAACTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1 201242_s_at 5′-AACTGTCATACGTATGGGACCTACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 2 201242_s_at 5′-ACACTTAATCTATATGCTTTACACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 3 201242_s_at 5′-AGAGCTGATCACAAGCACAAATCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 4 201242_s_at 5′-ATATGCTTTACACTAGCTTTCTGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 5 201242_s_at 5′-CTTTCCCACTAGCCATTTAATAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 6 201242_s_at 5′-GCTTTACACTAGCTTTCTGCATTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 7 201242_s_at 5′-GCTTTCTGCATTTAATAGGTTAGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 8 201242_s_at 5′-GGACCTACACTTAATCTATATGCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 9 201242_s_at 5′-GTATGGGACCTACACTTAATCTATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 10 201242_s_at 5′-TGATCACAAGCACAAATCTTTCCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 11 201243_s_at 5′-AAGCTGTGTCTGAGATCTGGATCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 12 201243_s_at 5′-CTTGTCCTCCGGTATGTTCTAAAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 13 201243_s_at 5′-GAATGCTGTCTTGACATCTCTTGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 14 201243_s_at 5′-GACTGGTGTTAAATGTTGTCTACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 15 201243_s_at 5′-GAGGCATCACATGCTGGTGCTGTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 16 201243_s_at 5′-GATCTTGTATTCAGTCAGGTTAAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 17 201243_s_at 5′-GGTGATGGGTTGTGTTATGCTTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 18 201243_s_at 5′-GGTGCTGTGTCTTTATGAATGTTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 19 201243_s_at 5′-GTTATGCTTGTATTGAATGCTGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 20 201243_s_at 5′-TCCGGTATGTTCTAAAGCTGTGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 21 201243_s_at 5′-TCTGAGATCTGGATCTGCCCATCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 22 201702_s_at 5′-ACAACACCTAATGCCACCAAAGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 23 201702_s_at 5′-AGAGGTGAAGGCTGAGACCCGGGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 24 201702_s_at 5′-AGCCTATGGAGGGCCTGGGCTTTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 25 201702_s_at 5′-AGCGACTGGATGGCTGTCATCCGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 26 201702_s_at 5′-CCAAGTTCCGTTCCACTGGACTAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 27 201702_s_at 5′-CCTTCCTGAGCGACCTTTGACAGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 28 201702_s_at 5′-GAAGAGCTCCGGAAATTGGCCTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 29 201702_s_at 5′-GAATGCCAGCACAGTGGTGGTTTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 30 201702_s_at 5′-GCAACGTAGCTGCTCCAGGAGATGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 31 201702_s_at 5′-GTCATCCGCTCTCAGAGCAGTACCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 32 201702_s_at 5′-TAGAGCTGGAGACACCATCCTTGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 33 204028_s_at 5′-AAAGGCTGGGGTGGGTGACTTGACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 34 204028_s_at 5′-AACCTCACTGTTCAGATGGGCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 35 204028_s_at 5′-AATATGCCCCGTTGACAGTGTTTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 36 204028_s_at 5′-ATAAATATCTTTCCCAATATGCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 37 204028_s_at 5′-CACTCAAGGTTCATTGGGCTCTGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 38 204028_s_at 5′-GACTAGGACTGCTGATCTGCACAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 39 204028_s_at 5′-GCAGGGTGCACATGCTGCGAGGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 40 204028_s_at 5′-GCGTGTCTGTAAATGTCTGCGCAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 41 204028_s_at 5′-GGAGCTGTGGACAGAGCTCCCTCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 42 204028_s_at 5′-GTATGCCTGGGTACAAACCTCACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 43 204028_s_at 5′-TCCTCCCTGCCATTACGGGAGCTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 44 205321_at 5′-AAATTGCCCTTAGCCGAAGAGTTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 45 205321_at 5′-ACGGCTTCTAGGTGTACGCACTGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 46 205321_at 5′-ATGATCTGCAATATGCTGCTCCAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 47 205321_at 5′-CAAAAATTGACCCCACTTTGTGCCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 48 205321_at 5′-CCCACTTTGTGCCGGGCTGACAGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 49 205321_at 5′-GAGTTAGTGCTGTCAAGGCCGATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 50 205321_at 5′-GCAAGTACTTGGTGCAGTCGGAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 51 205321_at 5′-GCTGCTCCAGGCGGTCTTATTGGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 52 205321_at 5′-GGTGAACATAGGATCCCTGTCAACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 53 205321_at 5′-GTCGGAGCTTTACCTGAGATATTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 54 205321_at 5′-TATTTCCTGCTTAGACGGCTTCTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 55 206582_s_at 5′-AATTGGCCTTGGGGACTACTCGGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 56 206582_s_at 5′-ACAGAAATGTGGCTCCAGTTGCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 57 206582_s_at 5′-CCCACCTGCCCATGTGATGAAGCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 58 206582_s_at 5′-CCCACGGGACTCAGAAGTGCGCCGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 59 206582_s_at 5′-CTCAGCTCCCACGGGACTCAGAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 60 206582_s_at 5′-CTTGGATCTTGAGGGTCTGGCACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 61 206582_s_at 5′-GCCGTTGCCATGGTGGACGGACTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 62 206582_s_at 5′-GGAAAGCCCAACGACCATGGAGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 63 206582_s_at 5′-GTCAGCCGCAGACTTTGGAAAGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 64 206582_s_at 5′-TGGAGAGATGGGCCGTTGCCATGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 65 206582_s_at 5′-TGGCACATCCTTAATCCTGTGCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 66 207090_x_at 5′-AAATGTGGCTAGTCCAAATTCAAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 67 207090_x_at 5′-AATGGACTAGACCTGTACTAATATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 68 207090_x_at 5′-CACTAGCAACCTGTTGAGCACTTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 69 207090_x_at 5′-CCGGCTCTCACTTCATATGTTTAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 70 207090_x_at 5′-CCTCAGACTTCCGAGTGGCTGGGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 71 207090_x_at 5′-CGCCACCACACCAGGTTGATTTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 72 207090_x_at 5′-GAAATTGAGTTATTGAGCACTGAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 73 207090_x_at 5′-GCAATTACTACTGCTAAATGTGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 74 207090_x_at 5′-GGTAGTCACTAGCAACCTGTTGAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 75 207090_x_at 5′-GTTAAGTATCTCAATTTTTCATATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 76 207090_x_at 5′-TATATGTAGCTCACGTATTTCTATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 77 207836_s_at 5′-ACTTCTCAGGGCTGGAAGTCCCGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 78 207836_s_at 5′-ATCTTCAGTGGTGGCTACTGTTCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 79 207836_s_at 5′-CAGGTGTGTGATGGCGGCTGCAATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 80 207836_s_at 5′-CTAGCTGTTCTACAAAACTGGAGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 81 207836_s_at 5′-GAGGCTACTTCTCAGGGCTGGAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 82 207836_s_at 5′-GCAATCTGTCTTGTGGGTATTAATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 83 207836_s_at 5′-GCTGCAATCTGTCTTGTGGGTATTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 84 207836_s_at 5′-GTCTTGTGGGTATTAATGCAATCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 85 207836_s_at 5′-TCTCAGGGCTGGAAGTCCCGTCAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 86 207836_s_at 5′-TCTCTAGCTGTTCTACAAAACTGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 87 207836_s_at 5′-TGCAATCTTCAGTGGTGGCTACTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 88 208993_s_at 5′-AACTCCTCATTTAGATGGGCATCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 89 208993_s_at 5′-AATTTCTCTTGTCAATGGCCAACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 90 208993_s_at 5′-CAGATGCAGCTAGCAAACCGTTTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 91 208993_s_at 5′-CATAACAACGAAACCAACTCCTCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 92 208993_s_at 5′-CCTCTGATTCCGAAAGTGCTACTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 93 208993_s_at 5′-GAGTTGTCTCTTTCACAGAGTTGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 94 208993_s_at 5′-GATACAAATGGTTCACAGTTCTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 95 208993_s_at 5′-GCGAGAACTTTCGTTGTCTTTGTAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 96 208993_s_at 5′-GCGGAGGTACGGATACTCAGTTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 97 208993_s_at 5′-GTGTGCCCCAAAACATGCGAGAACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 98 208993_s_at 5′-GTTGTGGAGAGCTGATTCCCAAATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 99 209272_at 5′-ACGTTTCCTGTATTCTAATCTATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 100 209272_at 5′-ATCTTCCAACTTCCAATATTTATCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 101 209272_at 5′-CCCGAGTCTCTTACACTTTATTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 102 209272_at 5′-GAGGTGGGACGAATGCACTTGCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 103 209272_at 5′-GATGTCCACGTTTTTGTGACTCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 104 209272_at 5′-GGTTACCTCAGTATTACAGCCAATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 105 209272_at 5′-GTGGACCCACAGATTGCATCTTTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 106 209272_at 5′-TATAGTCCAAGGGACCATTTCTCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 107 209272_at 5′-TGCACTTGCTTCCTGTGGCAATAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 108 209272_at 5′-TTATGTTTCTAGTCTTTCAAGCTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 109 209272_at 5′-TTTATCCATTCGTTGTGGACCCACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 110 209487_at 5′-AACTATTTCTTGGCGACCTTTGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 111 209487_at 5′-AATTAGATTTGTCTCTGGGAATGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 112 209487_at 5′-CTTTCACCAAAACTATTTCTTGGCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 113 209487_at 5′-GGAGCTCCCATGTTGAATTTGTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 114 209487_at 5′-GTGTTTCTCTCCTGAGGCAAAGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 115 209487_at 5′-GTGTTTGTAACATACCAACCTACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 116 209487_at 5′-TCTTGGCGACCTTTGAGAGATTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 117 209487_at 5′-TGTAACATACCAACCTACTGCAGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 118 209487_at 5′-TTGTCCACTTCTCCAGCAAATTAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 119 209487_at 5′-TTGTCTCTGGGAATGTGTTTGTAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 120 209487_at 5′-TTTTGTCCACTTCTCCAGCAAATTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 121 209488_s_at 5′-AAGCTCACATCTAAACAGCCTGTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 122 209488_s_at 5′-AATTCCGCAAACACTACGACTAGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 123 209488_s_at 5′-ACTGTACCTCAGTTCATTGCCAGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 124 209488_s_at 5′-CAAGAACAAACTCGTAGGGACTCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 125 209488_s_at 5′-CGCTTCGATCCTGAAATTCCGCAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 126 209488_s_at 5′-GAATGCTTTGAATGGCATCCGCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 127 209488_s_at 5′-GCCATATGAGCTCACAGTGCCTGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 128 209488_s_at 5′-GTCAGTTTTGACAGTCGCTCAGAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 129 209488_s_at 5′-TAGCCCTGAAGTGTGGGCCCCGTAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 130 209488_s_at 5′-TCTGTACCCAGCGGAGTTAGCGCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 131 209488_s_at 5′-TTTACCCCAGTAGCCCTGAAGTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 132 211113_s_at 5′-AACTGCAAGCAGCCTCTCAGCTGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 133 211113_s_at 5′-CACCAGGCACCGTGGGTCCTGGATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 134 211113_s_at 5′-CATTCCCCTTTCTAGCTTTAACTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 135 211113_s_at 5′-GATGAGAGGCTTCCTCAGTCCAGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 136 211113_s_at 5′-GGAAGATTAGACACTGTGGCCGAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 137 211113_s_at 5′-GGACTTCATCGTACTCGGGATTTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 138 211113_s_at 5′-GGCCGAGGGCACGTCTAGAATCGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 139 211113_s_at 5′-GGGTCCTGGATGGGGAACTGCAAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 140 211113_s_at 5′-GTCCTCAGGTACAAAATCCGGGCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 141 211113_s_at 5′-TACTCGGGATTTTCTTCATCTCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 142 211113_s_at 5′-TAGAACCGCGTTGGGTTTGTGGGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 143 212676_at 5′-AAGACTGGTCAGCCTGCATTAGTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 144 212676_at 5′-AGAATTGCTGCTATACTGGTGGTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 145 212676_at 5′-ATATTTCACATTTATCCACACAGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 146 212676_at 5′-ATTTCTTTGTGGTACCTGCAGTTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 147 212676_at 5′-CAAAAAGATATTAATCCCTCTACTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 148 212676_at 5′-GAGCATATTGGTATCTGGATGTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 149 212676_at 5′-GAGTTTCCTGTAGTGCTGTTTCATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 150 212676_at 5′-GGTGGTATGGATTATCATGGCATTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 151 212676_at 5′-GTAATGCAGATCCAATTTCTTTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 152 212676_at 5′-GTAGGGGGGCTGTTAGAATTGCTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 153 212676_at 5′-TACTCCCAGGTTCCCTTTATATGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 154 212976_at 5′-ATCTGTGTACAATTGTTTTTGCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 155 212976_at 5′-ATGAATGCCTTCTGCATGTTGTACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 156 212976_at 5′-CTTGTATAATACACTACTGCTGAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 157 212976_at 5′-GAATGGATGTGTTCGTGCATATATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 158 212976_at 5′-GAGATGGCTTTCAGTTGAGTTTAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 159 212976_at 5′-GCATGTTGTACATTATCTCTAACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 160 212976_at 5′-GCATTTTTGGTGGTAAATCCCTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 161 212976_at 5′-GCCACAGATTCAGTAGCTTTTGGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 162 212976_at 5′-GGTAAATCCCTTTGCCACAGATTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 163 212976_at 5′-GTAGCTTTTGGTAAACTTCACTGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 164 212976_at 5′-TGGGCCAATCTGGAATAGAGACATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 165 213056_at 5′-AAAGCAAATGATTTCCATATTCCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 166 213056_at 5′-AAAGCTCCAAGCTGCAGTGGATTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 167 213056_at 5′-AACAACGACAAAAAGCTCCAAGCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 168 213056_at 5′-AACTGGTCCTTAGTCATTTGTATAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 169 213056_at 5′-ACAAGTTTCTTGTTCATATTGTGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 170 213056_at 5′-ACTACCTCATACTTTCCTTGGAAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 171 213056_at 5′-ATTTCCATATTCCTGATTGATCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 172 213056_at 5′-ATTTGTATAGCCTTCTAGAATCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 173 213056_at 5′-GAAATAACCTTTTTGCATATTCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 174 213056_at 5′-GATTTGTTAAACTGGTCCTTAGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 175 213056_at 5′-GGCTAAAACTACCTCATACTTTCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 176 214252_s_at 5′-AATGGGACATTAGTTCAAGTAGCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 177 214252_s_at 5′-ACCTGAAATGGATGCCCCTTTCTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 178 214252_s_at 5′-ACTTGGCAACTGTACATTTCCCCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 179 214252_s_at 5′-ATCTCCGACCTGAAATGGATGCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 180 214252_s_at 5′-ATGCCCCTTTCTGGTGTAATCAAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 181 214252_s_at 5′-GGATTCAGAAGTACATTAACTGGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 182 214252_s_at 5′-TAACTGGCAAGAACTACACAATGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 183 214252_s_at 5′-TATGCATGATGCCATTGGATTCAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 184 214252_s_at 5′-TGCTTTTTTGAGGGAATTGATGATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 185 214252_s_at 5′-TGGTATGAACTTTTCCAACTTGGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 186 214252_s_at 5′-TTCTGGTGTAATCAAGGCGCTGCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 187 215411_s_at 5′-AAACCATTGCAGGTGCCAGTGTCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 188 215411_s_at 5′-AGTGGAGTCTGTGACTGCTCTGCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 189 215411_s_at 5′-ATAAAAAAAACATCCTGCTGCGGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 190 215411_s_at 5′-CAGAACACTCATGTCTACAGCTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 191 215411_s_at 5′-GAAACCTGTTGTGCAGAGCTCTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 192 215411_s_at 5′-GAGGCCAGGCCATGTTTGGGGCCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 193 215411_s_at 5′-GCTTGTGTATCCTCAGACCAAACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 194 215411_s_at 5′-GGCCTTGTTCTGACAGCATTCTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 195 215411_s_at 5′-GTTAGCCAGATGCTTGTGTATCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 196 215411_s_at 5′-TCCACACACCCTGGCTTTGAAGTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 197 215411_s_at 5′-TGGCCCCCAGGAAACCTGTTGTGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 198 216262_s_at 5′-ATCCAGGTTAACTGATGCTGCCATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 199 216262_s_at 5′-CCGTGTGCCCCAGGGGGATCAGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 200 216262_s_at 5′-CTGGTTGGCATTTCCCCATTATGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 201 216262_s_at 5′-GAACATGGCTTCATCCAGGTTAACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 202 216262_s_at 5′-GCTTTGCTCTCTCTAGGTGGGCAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 203 216262_s_at 5′-GGATGCCTGTAGTAGGGAACTCTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 204 216262_s_at 5′-GTGAGGGAGCCATGCTGCTGAATTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 205 216262_s_at 5′-GTGGGAGTGTGAACGGATCGCTGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 206 216262_s_at 5′-GTGTTGGGTAGGGCAGACTCTGCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 207 216262_s_at 5′-TCGCCCATCTGTTGCTGTGGGAGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 208 216262_s_at 5′-TGGGCTGAGGTGGGATTTTCCCTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 209 218183_at 5′-ATGGCATCCACGCATGGGATCTGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 210 218183_at 5′-ATGGGATCTGCAAGCTGGAGCCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 211 218183_at 5′-CATCTCTGCACTAACTCATCTGAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 212 218183_at 5′-CGGCAGTGGCTGTAAGGTCACCTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 213 218183_at 5′-CTGTGACTGGGCCAGGGCACACGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 214 218183_at 5′-GACAGACTGGGCTGAGGCTGACAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 215 218183_at 5′-GGCTGCAGGCAGTCTACTGGCAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 216 218183_at 5′-GGTGGCAGTCTTGGTCAGTAGTTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 217 218183_at 5′-GGTGTAGACCAGCCCTGGGATTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 218 218183_at 5′-TCAGTGCTGATGCCATGCCAACTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 219 218183_at 5′-TCTGCACACGCAGGTTCTGGGCGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 220 218907_s_at 5′-CCTGCACACTGGGCTATTGCTTTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 221 218907_s_at 5′-CTCCACATGCTGCAAGGACAGACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 222 218907_s_at 5′-CTGGGCTATTGCTTTATCCCTATCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 223 218907_s_at 5′-GAAAGGTAGGGATGGGCCAGCCTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 224 218907_s_at 5′-GAAGGGCTGTGAGCAGGTGTAAGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 225 218907_s_at 5′-GACAGTAGGCAGGCTGAGTGGCCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 226 218907_s_at 5′-GAGCAGGTGTAAGGGCTCCCACATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 227 218907_s_at 5′-GCTTTATCCCTATCCTGAGAGCAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 228 218907_s_at 5′-TCAGCTGTTGGGAGACAGTAGGCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 229 218907_s_at 5′-TGCTCCAGCCTGCAACTTAGTGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 230 218907_s_at 5′-TTAGTGGAAGGAATTACTTCCTCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 231 219871_at 5′-AACAGATTCATCATTATTCCTAAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 232 219871_at 5′-AGTGCCTACTTTTCTTCGATATCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 233 219871_at 5′-GAACATTGTCATTTAGCCAAGCAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 234 219871_at 5′-GAGATTTCTCATATGTTTGCGTATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 235 219871_at 5′-GAGCCAGCAGGTTCACCAGAAAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 236 219871_at 5′-GAGCGTTTGCTGGAACACATTATGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 237 219871_at 5′-GATATCATTAGCTGTTTTTCGAAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 238 219871_at 5′-GGAGCCAGTCGAAGATCCTGTTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 239 219871_at 5′-GGCAGGCATTTCTTGAACATTGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 240 219871_at 5′-TAGAAAGTATCCACCAGTGCCTACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 241 219871_at 5′-TATGCTTCTGTGGCAGGCATTTCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 242 220128_s_at 5′-ACAGCCCCTGCACAAGGCTGACACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 243 220128_s_at 5′-ACTAATGCTATCAAAGTCCTCCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 244 220128_s_at 5′-AGCCCGGCTGCTCTAGCAGGAATGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 245 220128_s_at 5′-AGGACTCTGCTTGTTTCAGTAGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 246 220128_s_at 5′-CCTTGACTGGTGGGCTTTTTACGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 247 220128_s_at 5′-GCTTCTCCCACGGGTAGTGTCAGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 248 220128_s_at 5′-GGACCTCTCCCTAGTGATTATCTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 249 220128_s_at 5′-TAAGACACCTTTTATAAGCCTCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 250 220128_s_at 5′-TACATTTGCGGTTTGGCCACAGGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 251 220128_s_at 5′-TTAAAAAGTCACTTCAGCCCCACAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 252 220128_s_at 5′-TTATCTAGCCAGCTACACCTTACTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 253 221621_at 5′-AAGTGTATATTGACATTTCTGGAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 254 221621_at 5′-CACTCACAAGAGTGTATACCCTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 255 221621_at 5′-GCACAATTTGGGCCACTCACAAGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 256 221621_at 5′-GGAAATGTATTAATTGCCCAAAGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 257 221621_at 5′-GGCAGGAGAGCCGAGGTAAGACTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 258 221621_at 5′-GGTAAGACTTACTGTAGGCTGTCGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 259 221621_at 5′-GTTTTTTGTCTTTGCGATGGAGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 260 221621_at 5′-TAAACAGTTACCTACATTCTCCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 261 221621_at 5′-TACTGTAGGCTGTCGTTTTTTTTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 262 221621_at 5′-TCCTCTGCATGCTTGTCTTTAGAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 263 221621_at 5′-TGTTTGCACAATTTGGGCCACTCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 264 41113_at 5′-AAGTCGTAGGGCAGCTATGGAAACC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 265 41113_at 5′-AGAAGCCTTCACCTTCCAGCTTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 266 41113_at 5′-AGACAAGCAGTGTGATAGAGTCCTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 267 41113_at 5′-AGTCACTGTATATACGTGCACATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 268 41113_at 5′-CCAGCTTTTGTCTGGCCTGTGCTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 269 41113_at 5′-CGTGGGAGCCACTGGTCTGTGCACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 270 41113_at 5′-GCCTGGGATGCTCCATTGCATTTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 271 41113_at 5′-GGCAGCTATGGAAACCACTGGGTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 272 41113_at 5′-GGTGGGTTTAGTCATCTCGGAAGTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 273 41113_at 5′-GTCCTTGGTGGGTTTAGTCATCTCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 274 41113_at 5′-TCACCTAGTCACTGTATATACGTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 275 41113_at 5′-TCGTAGGGCAGCTATGGAAACCACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 276 41113_at 5′-TCTCGGAAGTCGTAGGGCAGCTATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 277 41113_at 5′-TGAGTGGCCAAGACAAGCAGTGTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 278 41113_at 5′-TGGTCTGTGCACATCCACGGTGGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 279 41113_at 5′-TTCATCCCAGCCTGGGATGCTCCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 280 202646_s_at 5′-ATAAGTAGCCGCCTGGTTACTGTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 759 202646_s_at 5′-CGCCTGGTTACTGTGTCCTGTAAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 760 202646_s_at 5′-AAAATACAGACACTTGACCCTTGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 761 202646_s_at 5′-CCTTGGTGTAGCTTCTGTTCAACTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 762 202646_s_at 5′-TGGATGGGTCTGATTTCTTGGCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 763 202646_s_at 5′-TTCTTGGCCCTCTTCTTGAATTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 764 202646_s_at 5′-GAATTGGCCATATACAGGGTCCCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 765 202646_s_at 5′-CCAGTGGACTGAAGGCTTTGTCTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 766 202646_s_at 5′-GATGTGGGGGAGGGCGGTTTTATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 767 202646_s_at 5′-TTGAGGTTTTGATCTCTGGGTAAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 768 202646_s_at 5′-GAGGCCGTTTATCTTTGTAAACACG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 769 202956_at 5′-GGTAGGTGGTGATTTTGAGGCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 770 202956_at 5′-TGAGGCTGTAACATGCCCAGAAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 771 202956_at 5′-GAAGCTGTTGTGGCCGACACTTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 772 202956_at 5′-GTGGCCGACACTTCAACAATAGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 773 202956_at 5′-ATATCCCTACTGACAGTAACTACCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 774 202956_at 5′-GTAACTACCTGTCACATATTTCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 775 202956_at 5′-CTTTTGGGTGGTGGGGCTTGATGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 776 202956_at 5′-GGCATGGTTTGCGGAGGTTAGATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 777 202956_at 5′-GTGAATTGTGCTCTGATGGTTAAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 778 202956_at 5′-AGATTGTCAAGCATTCCGTATTAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 779 202956_at 5′-ATTGATTCCCATCTGGCATATTCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 780 203474_at 5′-ACTGTGATATAGGTACTCTGATTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 781 203474_at 5′-AACTTTGGACATCCTGTGATCTGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 782 203474_at 5′-GGGGGTGGGAAATTTAGCTGACTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 783 203474_at 5′-GACAAACATGTAAACCTATTTTCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 784 203474_at 5′-AAATGTCCCACTTGAATAACGTAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 785 203474_at 5′-CTGTCTTCTGGGAGTTATCAATTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 786 203474_at 5′-GAAAGTGCACTACTGCCTCATGTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 787 203474_at 5′-TACTGCCTCATGTAAAGACTCTTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 788 203474_at 5′-AAGACTCTTGCACGCAGAGCCTTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 789 203474_at 5′-GCACGCAGAGCCTTTAAGTGACTAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 790 203474_at 5′-TGAATACTTCAATTGTGCCTCTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 791 205256_at 5′-TTTTGCTAGTGTTGAATTTTCTTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 792 205256_at 5′-CAAGCCCAAGACTGCTTAACTTCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 793 205256_at 5′-GGTATGGGAGTGGGCTCTATGGGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 794 205256_at 5′-CTCTATGGGGTGGTCTGCACCCATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 795 205256_at 5′-TGGGACTCTTTTCCCTAAATCCTGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 796 205256_at 5′-GGCAGGGTGCACAGCATTAGTTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 797 205256_at 5′-CGCCCCCACCTTGAATAGCTAAAGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 798 205256_at 5′-GAGTTGTTGACGTCTAACTCCTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 799 205256_at 5′-GTCTAACTCCTTCCATTAAATTAAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 800 205256_at 5′-AAGTACTGACCTCCTAATATTTAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 801 205256_at 5′-GATTCTTTTATATTCCATTGTTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 802 207837_at 5′-TCTGCTGAATACTATACCCTTCAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 803 207837_at 5′-GAATACTATACCCTTCAGCAATGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 804 207837_at 5′-TCAGCAATGGCTACTAGAAGGACGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 805 207837_at 5′-CTAGAAGGACGAACAATTGCCCTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 806 207837_at 5′-AAGGACGAACAATTGCCCTCCTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 807 207837_at 5′-TTGGAAGTACGGCTAATAGAAGCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 808 207837_at 5′-ATAGAAGCCCTAGATCCGAATAAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 809 207837_at 5′-GCCCTAGATCCGAATAAGATCCGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 810 207837_at 5′-TAAGAATATGTAATGGACCAGGCGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 811 207837_at 5′-ATGTAATGGACCAGGCGCAGTGCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 812 207837_at 5′-TGATGACAGAAGTGTGAGACCAGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 813 207753_at 5′-CAACATTGAGGCAGGGCTCACTCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 814 207753_at 5′-AGGGCTCACTCTCCTAAATTGTAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 815 207753_at 5′-GACAGATCTAACTTTCCTAGTGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 816 207753_at 5′-GTTTCAGCATGTGTGTACACCTATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 817 207753_at 5′-TACACCTATGAAACCACCACAGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 818 207753_at 5′-ACCACAGTCAAGATATCCAACACAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 819 207753_at 5′-AAGATTGTCCCTTTATAATCCTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 820 207753_at 5′-TATAATCCTCAATTTTTCCTTATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 821 207753_at 5′-TTTCCACAATTCACAAGCAACAGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 822 207753_at 5′-GGTTAATCCATTATCTTGTTGCATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 823 207753_at 5′-GAATCAATTGTTTGCTCATTTGTAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 824 208883_at 5′-AACCTCTGTATGCACATGATGGGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 825 208883_at 5′-AGGACATTTGAAACCCTAATTGTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 826 208883_at 5′-AGGCACTATGCTTTTATTATATAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 827 208883_at 5′-ATGCACAATGTCTTAAGTCTTCCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 828 208883_at 5′-GATATTCTCAGCCCTGTTAACACTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 829 208883_at 5′-GCCTTGAGGATAGTCTTCATGTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 830 208883_at 5′-GTAGTGACTCATTGTATTACTTAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 831 208883_at 5′-GTCTTCATGTTCAAAGGCACTATGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 832 208883_at 5′-TAAAACTTATATAACACGCTGTATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 833 208883_at 5′-TACATCACCTTAACCTCTGTATGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 834 208883_at 5′-TGAACCACATGATATTCTCAGCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 835 209740_s_at 5′-ACTCTAGAGTAATGATGGTCCCTGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 836 209740_s_at 5′-ATAAACACCAACGATGGCCTCTTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 837 209740_s_at 5′-CATATGTATTTGACCCTGTGGGAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 838 209740_s_at 5′-CCCCTTCCTTTGATCATTTCATGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 839 209740_s_at 5′-GATTCTCAATTGTTATGTCCACTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 840 209740_s_at 5′-GGAGTTATGCATAGACCCACTCTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 841 209740_s_at 5′-GGTCCCTGTGGTATATACTTTCTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 842 209740_s_at 5′-GGTTCTCAGAAGCCAAAATACACAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 843 209740_s_at 5′-GTCCACTTATTCACTAGGTAAATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 844 209740_s_at 5′-TAAATTCCTTGTTGATGTACCCTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 845 209740_s_at 5′-TACTTTCTCCTACTCTAGCAAACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 846 211536_x_at 5′-AGGTGAGCAGTAGGTCATCCAGTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 847 211536_x_at 5′-CAACTCGAAGTCATCCATGGACCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 848 211536_x_at 5′-CACAGCCTATTCCAAGCCTAAACGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 849 211536_x_at 5′-CAGCCAAGACGTAGATCCATCCAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 850 211536_x_at 5′-CCATCCCAATGGCTTATCTTACACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 851 211536_x_at 5′-CCTTTCTACTTACTACCAGCAATGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 852 211536_x_at 5′-GCAAAATACATCTCGCCTGGTACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 853 211536_x_at 5′-GGACCCCTGATGATTCCACAGATAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 854 211536_x_at 5′-GGGAGCAGTGTGGAGAGCTTGCCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 855 211536_x_at 5′-TCTGGATGTCCCTGAGATCGTCATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 856 211536_x_at 5′-TGATTACTACCTCAGGACCAACCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 857 211537_x_at 5′-AGGTGAGCAGTAGGTCATCCAGTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 858 211537_x_at 5′-CAAAAGCCTTTCTACTTACTACCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 859 211537_x_at 5′-CAACTCGAAGTCATCCATGGACCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 860 211537_x_at 5′-CAGCCAAGACGTAGATCCATCCAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 861 211537_x_at 5′-CCATCCCAATGGCTTATCTTACACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 862 211537_x_at 5′-GACAAGGCACTTCATGATTCTCTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 863 211537_x_at 5′-GACCAACCTCAGAAAAGCCAACTCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 864 211537_x_at 5′-GATTCTCTGGGACCGTTACATTTTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 865 211537_x_at 5′-GCAAAATACATCTCGCCTGGTACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 866 211537_x_at 5′-GGACCCCTGATGATTCCACAGATAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 867 211537_x_at 5′-TGATTACTACCTCAGGACCAACCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 868 212114_at 5′-AAGTAGTCCATCCTATACAGATAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 869 212114_at 5′-AGAGGGTACATACTCCTTTCTGGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 870 212114_at 5′-CCAGGGACCACTGCCTGGCATTATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 871 212114_at 5′-GAATGCTCCCTACCATATAGTTGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 872 212114_at 5′-GATTATGTGTATTGATCACCCTGCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 873 212114_at 5′-GTATAAGGTGGGCTTGGTCCAACAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 874 212114_at 5′-TAGCTGATTAACTGTATTCCCCTTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 875 212114_at 5′-TGATCACCCTGCAATCCTATTATGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 876 212114_at 5′-TGCCTGGCATTATCGCATGCTGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 877 212114_at 5′-TGGCCCCTCTACCAATAGGGCAGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 878 212114_at 5′-TTTCTTCCATACATTAGTTCCCACC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 879 212875_s_at 5′-AAAGCAGCCTGCACAGGGCAAGGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 880 212875_s_at 5′-CAAACCGGCCTAGACACGAAGACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 881 212875_s_at 5′-CCTCGTTCTCTCAGTTAGCAGCTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 882 212875_s_at 5′-GAAACACAATACACTGCCTCGTTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 883 212875_s_at 5′-GATTGTATTCCTCAGTAGCACTTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 884 212875_s_at 5′-GCAGCGCACCATTCATCATTTAGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 885 212875_s_at 5′-GGCAGGACACGTATCTCTGTCTGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 886 212875_s_at 5′-GGCTTGTGGTTTGTTGTTTACTCTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 887 212875_s_at 5′-GTCCATGACCGTTTGCATTCGAAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 888 212875_s_at 5′-TAATCTCACGGCTCTTGATCTGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 889 212875_s_at 5′-TTGGCCTGACGCTGGAGTGCGGTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 890 213433_at 5′-AAGTCAGCGATTATGCCGGCGGTTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 891 213433_at 5′-ATGTCGGTGCACAGCTGAAAGTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 892 213433_at 5′-ATTCCCGTCAGAGTTTGCTTTGATT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 893 213433_at 5′-CACTCCATGTGGTTTCAGGGTTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 894 213433_at 5′-GCCGGCGGTTAGAAATGTGCCAGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 895 213433_at 5′-GGGTGTCATTGATGTGGGCTGAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 896 213433_at 5′-GGTTAAAGGAGTCCGCAGCTCCCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 897 213433_at 5′-TGAGCTGGGGAACATGTCGGTGCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 898 213433_at 5′-TGGCCTGGAGGGTGACACCATGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 899 213433_at 5′-TTATTTTTAGCTCTGCACTCCATGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 900 213433_at 5′-TTCTTTATTCCCCTCTGGACTAAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 901 213557_at 5′-CAGAGGAGGCTAAGCCCGGGCAGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 902 213557_at 5′-CCCAGTGCCCAGAAACAATGCCTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 903 213557_at 5′-CCCAGTTACACACTTCCATGGTACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 904 213557_at 5′-CTCATTCTCAACTCCTTAGACTCAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 905 213557_at 5′-CTTTCCATACCTGTACTCACAACTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 906 213557_at 5′-GTACTATATATCATTCCTTCAGAGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 907 213557_at 5′-GTCCTTTGCAAACTCATTCTCAACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 908 213557_at 5′-TATTTCCTATGTATTTGTCCAGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 909 213557_at 5′-TCCTTAGACTCAGTCAAGTCCCCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 910 213557_at 5′-TGACCATTTCTATCTGTGTTCACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 911 213557_at 5′-TGTTCACCAATGTGTTCCCAGTGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 912 213861_s_at 5′-AAATTACCTTCCTATTGCATTTCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 913 213861_s_at 5′-AGGGTAGGGCTGTGGTTTACTCCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 914 213861_s_at 5′-CTTTCCTGAGCCTCTTGCTTGAATG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 915 213861_s_at 5′-GACATTTGTGATTCTCATTTTCTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 916 213861_s_at 5′-GATGTACTCTTTGTTCTCTAAAACC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 917 213861_s_at 5′-GCTTGAATGTGATTTCTTTCTCCCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 918 213861_s_at 5′-TATTGCCACCTGTCAAAATCTTCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 919 213861_s_at 5′-TGGACAAATTCTCGAACCCATTCAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 920 213861_s_at 5′-TGTCTAAACCCCTGAAGCCTAACAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 921 213861_s_at 5′-TTGCTACGTGTATTGGACCTCTGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 922 213861_s_at 5′-TTTCTCCCTGAGACCCATAAGGTTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 923 214004_s_at 5′-ACACGTGGCTCCAGATCAAAGCGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 924 214004_s_at 5′-CAAAGCGGCCAAGGACGGAGCATCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 925 214004_s_at 5′-CAAAGCTCTGGGTGACACGTGGCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 926 214004_s_at 5′-CAAGAATTACAAGGAGCCCGAGCCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 927 214004_s_at 5′-CCACCTGTGACCCCGTGGTGGAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 928 214004_s_at 5′-CCTCCTCCAACAACACGTGGATCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 929 214004_s_at 5′-CGTGGATCTGCATGGTTTGCCTGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 930 214004_s_at 5′-GACGACCACTTTGCCAAAGCTCTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 931 214004_s_at 5′-GGTTTGCCTGAGCTTTGAACAGTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 932 214004_s_at 5′-GTGGTGGAGGAGCATTTCCGCAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 933 214004_s_at 5′-TGTGGTCTCCTGAAGGGAGCGCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 934 214197_s_at 5′-CAAGCTGTATGTGGGCAGTCGGGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 935 214197_s_at 5′-CAGTCGGGTGGTCGCCAAATACAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 936 214197_s_at 5′-CCATTTGCCGGCCACTGAAAAAGAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 937 214197_s_at 5′-GAAGGCACGTGGTGGAAGTCCCGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 938 214197_s_at 5′-GCCCCATGGTACTGCTCAAGAGTGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 939 214197_s_at 5′-GCTCAAGAGTGGCCAGCTTATCAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 940 214197_s_at 5′-GGAAGTCCCGAGTTGAGGAGGTGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 941 214197_s_at 5′-GGACATAGAAGACATCTCCTGCCGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 942 214197_s_at 5′-GGATGGCAGCCTAGTCAGGATCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 943 214197_s_at 5′-TAGAGGAGTATGTCACTGCCTACCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 944 214197_s_at 5′-TCTCCTGCCGTGACTTCATAGAGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 945 214745_at 5′-ACTGACATGCATTATTTTCACTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 946 214745_at 5′-GAATAGGCCGTGAGGGTGTGAGGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 947 214745_at 5′-GAATGAGGGACTTCCATCAGACTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 948 214745_at 5′-GAGTTGCCAAACTACCTGTTGTACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 949 214745_at 5′-GCAATGATGTTCTTCCTGGAATTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 950 214745_at 5′-GTTCTTATCCCACCCATAATGAGAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 951 214745_at 5′-TACAGACTGCGAACAACGGCTTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 952 214745_at 5′-TGCCCTTCCCACTTTTTGGAATAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 953 214745_at 5′-TTCAGGGAACCAAGCAACTCTATTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 954 214745_at 5′-TTTAGGATGTTCTTATCCCACCCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 955 214745_at 5′-TTTTGCTAATGGCTTTGTATGTAAC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 956 214860_at 5′-ACACCACTGAGTGCCATGCAGAGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 957 214860_at 5′-ACATTAAGTATTTTCAGCCCACTAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 958 214860_at 5′-AGAGTCCGAGTGTCTTTACACCACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 959 214860_at 5′-AGCATTCAACTTTTGAGGGCTACCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 960 214860_at 5′-AGGACTGAAGTATCTACTCTGGGTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 961 214860_at 5′-CTGCTGCACCAGCTTAACATGTGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 962 214860_at 5′-CTTTCTGGATGAGCTGTTCTGTCTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 963 214860_at 5′-GAAACCTACAAGGCACCAGGCTAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 964 214860_at 5′-GAATTCCAAACTTTGAGCCGACGAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 965 214860_at 5′-GATTTCAGTGGCCACCTGAGGAATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 966 214860_at 5′-GTCATTTTCCTTGTATCTGGGGAGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 967 215557_at 5′-ACAGAGGCATGCTACCATACCTGGT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 968 215557_at 5′-ACCTCCTAATACCAACACCTTGAAG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 969 215557_at 5′-AGAGCGGTAGGTTACTCTGGGCACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 970 215557_at 5′-CAGAGGCTCTGGCTCGAAGGAAGCG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 971 215557_at 5′-CCAAGGCCTTCCTTGGTGTTGCCTC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 972 215557_at 5′-GAAGGAAGCGGAGGGCGTGGCTGCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 973 215557_at 5′-GCCTTTTCTTAGTGCCTTAGAGGGC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 974 215557_at 5′-GGCTGCTGAGACAGCCAACACCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 975 215557_at 5′-GTGTGCTCTTCCCAGTAGAGCGGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 976 215557_at 5′-TTGCCTCCATTCCCTGGAAAGGTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 977 215557_at 5′-TTTTACATTTCAGTGTGCTCTTCCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 978 219236_at 5′-AACCAGGCCGAGAGGCCACACACTT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 979 219236_at 5′-ATGCATGCGTGTCCAGGCTGAAGAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 980 219236_at 5′-CCATCCCCACAAACCAGGTAATGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 981 219236_at 5′-CTGAATGCTTCTTGCTAACCAGGCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 982 219236_at 5′-CTTCTGGAAGTCTCTGCTCAGCACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 983 219236_at 5′-GAAGATGCCCCTATATTCTGTCAAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 984 219236_at 5′-GACCGTGAGGGGGCTCTTGATGGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 985 219236_at 5′-GCTCAAGGTGTCCAGGCTTTTGGGG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 986 219236_at 5′-GTCCTGGTCATAACTGTGTGCTCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 987 219236_at 5′-GTTTGCCAGCAGCTATTTGCCTATA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 988 219236_at 5′-TGGGCCTATCTGGGTGCATTATGGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 989 219658_at 5′-AACAGAATACTAAGGGCCCCTACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 990 219658_at 5′-AGGTGTTTGCTGAATCCAGGTCTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 991 219658_at 5′-CACTGTACCACATTATCTCTTTTCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 992 219658_at 5′-CCAGGTCTGAGATCACAATCCCACC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 993 219658_at 5′-CTCTGCCCTCATAGAATCCTAATTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 994 219658_at 5′-GAAACATTGAACAGCCCCATTTAGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 995 219658_at 5′-GAGGCCCAATCTCAACTGTAGACTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 996 219658_at 5′-GATTCCTAGTCTAGTATCCTTCCCA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 997 219658_at 5′-GGATCCGCATATGAGAGTCGCACAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 998 219658_at 5′-TACCGACCTCTTAGGCTTGGTGTGA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 999 219658_at 5′-TCTTGTCCTTGTGCTCTGTGAAACA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1000 221483_s_at 5′-ACTTCGCCTGTACTGAAAGGGCCAA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1001 221483_s_at 5′-CAACCTTCTAATTAGGTAGGCCTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1002 221483_s_at 5′-CCCTTGGATCTGTTACTGCATCACT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1003 221483_s_at 5′-GATCACTGCTGGTCTTGATAGCCAT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1004 221483_s_at 5′-GATGCAATAGAACACTTCGCCTGTA-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1005 221483_s_at 5′-GCTGAATTTGTCAAATACCCCTTCC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1006 221483_s_at 5′-TAATTTGAGCCACATTCCCAACTCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1007 221483_s_at 5′-TAGGCCTCTAGGTATTCTGCAGATC-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1008 221483_s_at 5′-TATCTCACTCTGTCATTGTTAATCT-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1009 221483_s_at 5′-TGTTACTGCATCACTAGCACTTGTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1010 221483_s_at 5′-TTCCCCACCACACCTTATAAAATTG-3′ SEQ ID NO: 1011

TABLE 6 LSC gene signature (48) Entrez Representative Probe Set ID Gene Symbol Gene Title Gene ID UniGene ID Public ID 201242_s_at ATP1B1 “ATPase, Na+/K+ transporting, beta 1 polypeptide” 481 Hs.291196 BC000006 201243_s_at ATP1B1 “ATPase, Na+/K+ transporting, beta 1 polypeptide” 481 Hs.291196 NM_001677 201702_s_at PPP1R10 “protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 10” 5514 Hs.106019 AI492873 202646_s_at CSDE1 “cold shock domain containing E1, RNA-binding” 7812 Hs.69855 AA167775 202956_at ARFGEF1 ADP-ribosylation factor guanine nucleotide-exchange factor 10565 Hs.656902 NM_006421 1(brefeldin A-inhibited) 203474_at IQGAP2 IQ motif containing GTPase activating protein 2 10788 Hs.291030 NM_006633 204028_s_at RABGAP1 RAB GTPase activating protein 1 23637 Hs.271341 NM_012197 205256_at ZBTB39 zinc finger and BTB domain containing 39 9880 Hs.591025 NM_014830 205321_at EIF2S3 “eukaryotic translation initiation factor 2, subunit 3 gamma, 1968 Hs.539684 NM_001415 52 kDa” 206582_s_at GPR56 G protein-coupled receptor 56 9289 Hs.513633 NM_005682 207090_x_at ZFP30 zinc finger protein 30 homolog (mouse) 22835 Hs.716719 NM_014898 207753_at ZNF304 zinc finger protein 304 57343 Hs.287374 NM_020657 207836_s_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 Hs.334587 NM_006867 207837_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 Hs.334587 NM_006867 208883_at UBR5 ubiquitin protein ligase E3 component n-recognin 5 51366 Hs.591856 BF515424 208993_s_at PPIG peptidylprolyl isomerase G (cyclophilin G) 9360 Hs.470544 AW340788 209272_at NAB1 NGFI-A binding protein 1 (EGR1 binding protein 1) 4664 Hs.570078 AF045451 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 Hs.334587 D84109 209488_s_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 Hs.334587 D84109 209740_s_at PNPLA4 patatin-like phospholipase domain containing 4 8228 Hs.264 U03886 211113_s_at ABCG1 “ATP-binding cassette, sub-family G (WHITE), member 1” 9619 Hs.124649 U34919 211536_x_at MAP3K7 mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7 6885 Hs.719192 AB009358 211537_x_at MAP3K7 mitogen-activated protein kinase kinase kinase 7 6885 Hs.719192 AF218074 212114_at LOC552889 hypothetical protein LOC552889 552889 Hs.213541 BE967207 212676_at NF1 neurofibromin 1 4763 Hs.113577 AW293356 212875_s_at C2CD2 C2 calcium-dependent domain containing 2 25966 Hs.473894 AP001745 212976_at LRRC8B “leucine rich repeat containing 8 family, member B” 23507 Hs.482017 R41498 213056_at FRMD4B FERM domain containing 4B 23150 Hs.709671 AU145019 213433_at ARL3 ADP-ribosylation factor-like 3 403 Hs.182215 AF038193 213557_at CRKRS “Cdc2-related kinase, arginine/serine-rich” 51755 Hs.416108 AW305119 213861_s_at FAM119B “family with sequence similarity 119, member B” 25895 Hs.632720 N67741 214004_s_at VGLL4 vestigial like 4 (Drosophila) 9686 Hs.38032 AI806207 214197_s_at SETDB1 “SET domain, bifurcated 1” 9869 Hs.643565 AI762193 214252_s_at CLN5 “ceroid-lipofuscinosis, neuronal 5” 1203 Hs.30213 AV700514 214745_at PLCH1 “phospholipase C, eta 1” 23007 Hs.567423 AW665865 214860_at SLC9A7 “solute carrier family 9 (sodium/hydrogen exchanger), 84679 Hs.496057 AL022165 member 7” 215411_s_at TRAF3IP2 TRAF3 interacting protein 2 10758 Hs.654708 AL008730 215557_at — — — Hs.658129 AU144900 216262_s_at TGIF2 TGFB-induced factor homeobox 2 60436 Hs.632264 AL050318 218183_at C16orf5 chromosome 16 open reading frame 5 29965 Hs.654653 NM_013399 218907_s_at LRRC61 leucine rich repeat containing 61 65999 Hs.647119 NM_023942 219236_at PAQR6 progestin and adipoQ receptor family member VI 79957 Hs.235873 NM_024897 219658_at PTCD2 pentatricopeptide repeat domain 2 79810 Hs.126906 NM_024754 219871_at FLJ13197 hypothetical FLJ13197 79667 Hs.29725 NM_024614 220128_s_at NIPAL2 NIPA-like domain containing 2 79815 Hs.309489 NM_024759 221483_s_at ARPP19 “cAMP-regulated phosphoprotein, 19 kDa” 10776 Hs.512908 AF084555 221621_at C17orf86 chromosome 17 open reading frame 86 654434 — AF130050 41113_at ZNF500 zinc finger protein 500 26048 Hs.513316 AI871396

TABLE 7 Summary of Patient Data AML Relapse or Karyotype and Molecular # Diagnosis FAB Age Sex Marker 1 Relapse M2 48 f 46, t(2; 21)(p21; q22)[4]/46, 9 (AML #9) (1; 21)(q22; q22) 2 Diag M5a 58 f normal, FLT3ITD 3 Diag unclass 52 f +8 4 Diag unclass 62 m normal 5 Diag M5a 39 f +8 6 Diag unclass 80 f normal 7 Diag M5 48 m no data 8 Diag M1 72 f normal 9 Diag M2 47 f 46, t(2:21)[4]/t(6:21)[2]/t(15: 21)[2] 10 Diag M2 62 f trisomy 13 11 Diag M1 45 f normal 12 Diag M4eo 39 m 46, inv(16)(p13; q22) 13 Diag M5a 40 m normal, FLT3ITD 14 Diag M5a 75 m normal 15 Diag M4 23 m normal 16 Diag M5b 80 m no data

TABLE 8 Frequency of LSC in each fraction of 16 AML CD34−/CD38− CD34+/CD38− CD34+/CD38+ CD34−/CD38+ Frequency Frequency Frequency Frequency 1 LSC per X 1 LSC per X cells 1 LSC per X cells 1 LSC per X cells cells AML (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) (95% CI) 1 1.6 × 10³ 1.3 × 10⁵ 0 0 (2.7 × 10²-9.9 × 10³) (4.6 × 10⁴-3.7 × 10⁵) 2 5.8 × 10³ 4.2 × 10³ 0 0 (1.8 × 10³-1.8 × 10⁴) (1.4 × 10³-1.3 × 10⁴) 3 6.2 × 10³* 7.6 × 10³* 9.6 × 10³ 7.7 × 10³* (1-6.2 × 10³) (1-7.6 × 10³) (2.5 × 10³-3.7 × 10⁴) (1-7.7 × 10³) 4 7.1 × 10³ 9.2 × 10⁴ 0 4.4 × 10⁵* (1.1 × 10³-4.6 × 10⁴) (2.7 × 10⁴-3.1 × 10⁵) (1-4.4 × 10⁵) 5 1.1 × 10⁴ 4.5 × 10⁴ 0 0 (3.7 × 10³-3.4 × 10⁴) (1.8 × 10⁴-1.2 × 10⁵) 6 1.7 × 10⁵ 1.5 × 10⁵ 0 0 (6.9 × 10⁴-4.2 × 10⁵) (5.8 × 10⁴-4.1 × 10⁵) 7 1.7 × 10⁵* nt nt 9.1 × 10⁵* (1-1.7 × 10⁵) (1-9.1 × 10⁵) 8 2.1 × 10⁵ 0 0 0 (9.3 × 10⁴-4.9 × 10⁵) 9 2.6 × 10⁵* nt nt nt (1-2.6 × 10⁵) 10 2.5 × 10⁵ nt nt nt (6.0 × 10⁴-1.0 × 10⁶) 11 4.5 × 10⁵ 4.9 × 10⁴ 0 0 (6.4 × 10⁴-3.1 × 10⁶) (1.9 × 10⁴-1.3 × 10⁵) 12 4.9 × 10⁵ 0 0 0 (6.9 × 10⁴-3.5 × 10⁶) 13 1.1 × 10⁶ 2.4 × 10⁵ 0 0 (2.7 × 10⁵-4.3 × 10⁶) (9.0 × 10⁴-6.3 × 10⁵) 14 ** 0 0 0 15 *** 0 0 0 16 *** 0 0 0 Total 13/14 (93%) 8/13 (62%) 1/13 (8%) 3/14 (21%)

TABLE 9 Secondary engraftment of samples with LSC in multiple fractions Secondary Transplantation/Primary Mice AML 34+ 38− 34+ 38+ 34− 38+ 34− 38− 1 3/3 2/2 2 3/5 3/6 4 3/3 1/2 2/2 5 0/2 0/2 11 0/1 1/2 Note: “Number of primary mice with secondary engraftment”/“total number of primary mice tested”

TABLE 10 Percentage of each CD34 and CD38 sorted populations in 16 primary human AML samples Percentage of Each Sorted Fraction AML +/− +/+ −/+ −/− 1 5.9 80.4 13.1 0.6 2 15.3 50.3 31.0 3.4 3 8.6 65.4 24.1 2.0 4 10.9 17.2 62.2 9.7 5 3.7 18.0 72.4 5.9 6 90.8 3.0 2.9 3.3 7 49.8 15.3 29.0 5.9 8 1.0 31.1 66.1 1.9 9 4.2 62.1 33.1 0.6 10 4.8 60.0 19.5 15.7 11 11.8 39.8 39.8 8.5 12 1.2 48.6 48.8 1.5 13 12.3 5.3 67.0 15.3 14 0.4 71.3 22.6 5.8 15 0.1 46.2 43.3 10.5 16 0.7 7.7 86.6 4.9

TABLE 11 Percentage of total LSC in each sorted fraction of primary human AML Percentage of Total LSC in Each Fraction* +/− +/+ −/+ −/− AML (%) (%) (%) (%) 1 85 15 0 0 2 18 82 0 0 3  13**  79**  6**  2** 4  75**  18** 0  7** 5 46 54 0 0 6 96  4 0 0 8 100   0 0 0 11  3 97 0 0 12 100   0 0 0 13 33 67 0 0 *estimated by multiplying LSC frequency by the percentage of total patient cells each fraction represents **Estimate from lower 95% interval

TABLE 12 Complete LSC-R Probe List, including FDR<=0.05 Gene Entrez Representative Probe Set ID Symbol Gene Title Gene ID Public ID 201018_at EIF1AX eukaryotic translation 1964 AL079283 initiation factor 1A, X- linked 201080_at PIP4K2B phosphatidylinositol-5- 8396 BF338509 phosphate 4-kinase, type II, beta 201242_s_at ATP1B1 ATPase, Na+/K+ 481 BC000006 transporting, beta 1 polypeptide 201243_s_at ATP1B1 ATPase, Na+/K+ 481 NM_001677 transporting, beta 1 polypeptide 201702_s_at PPP1R10 protein phosphatase 1, 5514 AI492873 regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 10 202599_s_at NRIP1 nuclear receptor 8204 NM_003489 interacting protein 1 202646_s_at CSDE1 cold shock domain 7812 AA167775 containing E1, RNA- binding 202956_at ARFGEF1 ADP-ribosylation factor 10565 NM_006421 guanine nucleotide- exchange factor 1(brefeldin A-inhibited) 203106_s_at VPS41 vacuolar protein sorting 27072 NM_014396 41 homolog (S. cerevisiae) 203474_at IQGAP2 IQ motif containing 10788 NM_006633 GTPase activating protein 2 204028_s_at RABGAP1 RAB GTPase activating 23637 NM_012197 protein 1 204837_at MTMR9 myotubularin related 66036 AL080178 protein 9 205094_at PEX12 peroxisomal biogenesis 5193 NM_000286 factor 12 205256_at ZBTB39 zinc finger and BTB 9880 NM_014830 domain containing 39 205321_at EIF2S3 eukaryotic translation 1968 NM_001415 initiation factor 2, subunit 3 gamma, 52 kDa 205608_s_at ANGPT1 angiopoietin 1 284 U83508 205702_at PHTF1 putative homeodomain 10745 NM_006608 transcription factor 1 206582_s_at GPR56 G protein-coupled 9289 NM_005682 receptor 56 206874_s_at SLK STE20-like kinase (yeast) 9748 AL138761 206945_at LCT lactase 3938 NM_002299 207090_x_at ZFP30 zinc finger protein 30 22835 NM_014898 homolog (mouse) 207737_at — — — NM_021981 207753_at ZNF304 zinc finger protein 304 57343 NM_020657 207836_s_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with 11030 NM_006867 multiple splicing 207837_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with 11030 NM_006867 multiple splicing 207968_s_at MEF2C myocyte enhancer factor 4208 NM_002397 2C 208634_s_at MACF1 microtubule-actin 23499 AB029290 crosslinking factor 1 208883_at UBR5 ubiquitin protein ligase E3 51366 BF515424 component n-recognin 5 208993_s_at PPIG peptidylprolyl isomerase 9360 AW340788 G (cyclophilin G) 209200_at MEF2C myocyte enhancer factor 4208 AL536517 2C 209272_at NAB1 NGFI-A binding protein 1 4664 AF045451 (EGR1 binding protein 1) 209425_at AMACR /// alpha-methylacyl-CoA 114899 AA888589 C1QTNF3 racemase /// C1q and /// tumor necrosis factor 23600 related protein 3 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with 11030 D84109 multiple splicing 209488_s_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with 11030 D84109 multiple splicing 209740_s_at PNPLA4 patatin-like 8228 U03886 phospholipase domain containing 4 210132_at EFNA3 ephrin-A3 1944 AW189015 211113_s_at ABCG1 ATP-binding cassette, 9619 U34919 sub-family G (WHITE), member 1 211255_x_at DEDD death effector domain 9191 AF064605 containing 211536_x_at MAP3K7 mitogen-activated 6885 AB009358 protein kinase kinase kinase 7 211537_x_at MAP3K7 mitogen-activated 6885 AF218074 protein kinase kinase kinase 7 211877_s_at PCDHGA11 protocadherin gamma 56105 AF152505 subfamily A, 11 212114_at ATXN7L3B ataxin 7-like 3B 552889 BE967207 212397_at RDX radixin 5962 AL137751 212676_at NF1 neurofibromin 1 4763 AW293356 212851_at DCUN1D4 DCN1, defective in cullin 23142 AA194584 neddylation 1, domain containing 4 (S. cerevisiae) 212875_s_at C2CD2 C2 calcium-dependent 25966 AP001745 domain containing 2 212976_at LRRC8B leucine rich repeat 23507 R41498 containing 8 family, member B 213056_at FRMD4B FERM domain containing 23150 AU145019 4B 213313_at RABGAP1 RAB GTPase activating 23637 AI922519 protein 1 213433_at ARL3 ADP-ribosylation factor- 403 AF038193 like 3 213557_at CDK12 cyclin-dependent kinase 51755 AW305119 12 213639_s_at ZNF500 zinc finger protein 500 26048 AI871396 213861_s_at FAM119B family with sequence 25895 N67741 similarity 119, member B 214004_s_at VGLL4 vestigial like 4 9686 AI806207 (Drosophila) 214197_s_at SETDB1 SET domain, bifurcated 1 9869 AI762193 214252_s_at CLN5 ceroid-lipofuscinosis, 1203 AV700514 neuronal 5 214738_s_at NEK9 NIMA (never in mitosis 91754 BE792298 gene a)-related kinase 9 214745_at PLCH1 phospholipase C, eta 1 23007 AW665865 214820_at BRWD1 bromodomain and WD 54014 AJ002572 repeat domain containing 1 214860_at SLC9A7 solute carrier family 9 84679 AL022165 (sodium/hydrogen exchanger), member 7 215411_s_at TRAF3IP2 TRAF3 interacting protein 2 10758 AL008730 215557_at — — — AU144900 216262_s_at TGIF2 TGFB-induced factor 60436 AL050318 homeobox 2 218183_at C16orf5 chromosome 16 open 29965 NM_013399 reading frame 5 218907_s_at LRRC61 leucine rich repeat 65999 NM_023942 containing 61 219232_s_at EGLN3 egl nine homolog 3 (C. elegans) 112399 NM_022073 219236_at PAQR6 progestin and adipoQ 79957 NM_024897 receptor family member VI 219383_at PRR5L proline rich 5 like 79899 NM_024841 219658_at PTCD2 pentatricopeptide repeat 79810 NM_024754 domain 2 219718_at FGGY FGGY carbohydrate 55277 NM_018291 kinase domain containing 219871_at FLJ13197 hypothetical FLJ13197 79667 NM_024614 220128_s_at NIPAL2 NIPA-like domain 79815 NM_024759 containing 2 220360_at THAP9 THAP domain containing 9 79725 NM_024672 221020_s_at SLC25A32 solute carrier family 25, 81034 NM_030780 member 32 221294_at GPR21 G protein-coupled 2844 NM_005294 receptor 21 221483_s_at ARPP19 cAMP-regulated 10776 AF084555 phosphoprotein, 19 kDa 221621_at C17orf86 chromosome 17 open 654434 AF130050 reading frame 86 34408_at RTN2 reticulon 2 6253 AF004222 34726_at CACNB3 calcium channel, voltage- 784 U07139 dependent, beta 3 subunit 41113_at ZNF500 zinc finger protein 500 26048 AI871396

TABLE 13 Entrez Representative Probe Set ID Gene Symbol Gene Title Gene ID Public ID 200672_x_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 NM_003128 201917_s_at SLC25A36 solute carrier family 25, member 36 55186 AI694452 201952_at ALCAM activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule 214 AA156721 202932_at YES1 v-yes-1 Yamaguchi sarcoma viral oncogene homolog 1 7525 NM_005433 203139_at DAPK1 death-associated protein kinase 1 1612 NM_004938 203372_s_at SOCS2 suppressor of cytokine signaling 2 8835 AB004903 203875_at SMARCA1 SWI/SNF related, matrix associated, actin dependent 6594 NM_003069 regulator of chromatin, subfamily a, member 1 204753_s_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 AI810712 204754_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 W60800 204755_x_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 M95585 205376_at INPP4B inositol polyphosphate-4-phosphatase, type II, 105 kDa 8821 NM_003866 205453_at HOXB2 homeobox B2 3212 NM_002145 205984_at CRHBP corticotropin releasing hormone binding protein 1393 NM_001882 206099_at PRKCH protein kinase C, eta 5583 NM_006255 206310_at SPINK2 serine peptidase inhibitor, Kazal type 2 (acrosin-trypsin 6691 NM_021114 inhibitor) 206478_at KIAA0125 KIAA0125 9834 NM_014792 206674_at FLT3 fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 2322 NM_004119 206683_at ZNF165 zinc finger protein 165 7718 NM_003447 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 D84109 209676_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein-associated 7035 J03225 coagulation inhibitor) 209728_at HLA-DRB4 major histocompatibility complex, class II, DR beta 4 3126 BC005312 209994_s_at ABCB1 /// ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 1 /// 5243 /// AF016535 ABCB4 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 4 5244 210664_s_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein-associated 7035 AF021834 coagulation inhibitor) 210665_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein-associated 7035 AF021834 coagulation inhibitor) 212071_s_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 BE968833 212750_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 16B 26051 AB020630 213056_at FRMD4B FERM domain containing 4B 23150 AU145019 213094_at GPR126 G protein-coupled receptor 126 57211 AL033377 213714_at CACNB2 calcium channel, voltage-dependent, beta 2 subunit 783 AI040163 213844_at HOXA5 homeobox A5 3202 NM_019102 215388_s_at CFH /// complement factor H /// complement factor H-related 1 3075 /// X56210 CFHR1 3078 217975_at WBP5 WW domain binding protein 5 51186 NM_016303 218627_at DRAM1 DNA-damage regulated autophagy modulator 1 55332 NM_018370 218764_at PRKCH protein kinase C, eta 5583 NM_024064 218772_x_at TMEM38B transmembrane protein 38B 55151 NM_018112 218901_at PLSCR4 phospholipid scramblase 4 57088 NM_020353 218966_at MYO5C myosin VC 55930 NM_018728 219497_s_at BCL11A B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11A (zinc finger protein) 53335 NM_022893 221458_at HTR1F 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 1F 3355 NM_000866 221773_at ELK3 ELK3, ETS-domain protein (SRF accessory protein 2) 2004 AW575374 221942_s_at GUCY1A3 guanylate cyclase 1, soluble, alpha 3 2982 AI719730 41577_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 16B 26051 AB020630 222735_at TMEM38B transmembrane protein 38B 55151 AW452608 226547_at MYST3 MYST histone acetyltransferase (monocytic leukemia) 3 7994 AI817830 228904_at HOXB3 homeobox B3 3213 AW510657 235199_at RNF125 ring finger protein 125 54941 AI969697

TABLE 14 HSC-R FDR = 0.05 Probe List Gene Entrez Representative Probe Set ID Symbol Gene Title Gene ID Public ID 200033_at DDX5 DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) box 1655 NM_004396 polypeptide 5 200672_x_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 NM_003128 200962_at RPL31 ribosomal protein L31 6160 AI348010 201466_s_at JUN jun oncogene 3725 NM_002228 201625_s_at INSIG1 insulin induced gene 1 3638 BE300521 201695_s_at PNP purine nucleoside phosphorylase 4860 NM_000270 201889_at FAM3C family with sequence similarity 3, 10447 NM_014888 member C 201917_s_at SLC25A36 solute carrier family 25, member 55186 AI694452 36 201952_at ALCAM activated leukocyte cell adhesion 214 AA156721 molecule 202551_s_at CRIM1 cysteine rich transmembrane BMP 51232 BG546884 regulator 1 (chordin-like) 202724_s_at FOXO1 forkhead box O1 2308 NM_002015 202822_at LPP LIM domain containing preferred 4026 BF221852 translocation partner in lipoma 202842_s_at DNAJB9 DnaJ (Hsp40) homolog, subfamily 4189 AL080081 B, member 9 202932_at YES1 v-yes-1 Yamaguchi sarcoma viral 7525 NM_005433 oncogene homolog 1 203139_at DAPK1 death-associated protein kinase 1 1612 NM_004938 203372_s_at SOCS2 suppressor of cytokine signaling 2 8835 AB004903 203394_s_at HES1 hairy and enhancer of split 1, 3280 BE973687 (Drosophila) 203875_at SMARCA1 SWI/SNF related, matrix 6594 NM_003069 associated, actin dependent regulator of chromatin, subfamily a, member 1 204069_at MEIS1 Meis homeobox 1 4211 NM_002398 204304_s_at PROM1 prominin 1 8842 NM_006017 204753_s_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 AI810712 204754_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 W60800 204755_x_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 M95585 204917_s_at MLLT3 myeloid/lymphoid or mixed- 4300 AV756536 lineage leukemia (trithorax homolog, Drosophila); translocated to, 3 205376_at INPP4B inositol polyphosphate-4- 8821 NM_003866 phosphatase, type II, 105 kDa 205453_at HOXB2 homeobox B2 3212 NM_002145 205501_at PDE10A phosphodiesterase 10A 10846 AI143879 205984_at CRHBP corticotropin releasing hormone 1393 NM_001882 binding protein 206099_at PRKCH protein kinase C, eta 5583 NM_006255 206310_at SPINK2 serine peptidase inhibitor, Kazal 6691 NM_021114 type 2 (acrosin-trypsin inhibitor) 206385_s_at ANK3 ankyrin 3, node of Ranvier (ankyrin 288 NM_020987 G) 206478_at KIAA0125 KIAA0125 9834 NM_014792 206674_at FLT3 fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 2322 NM_004119 206683_at ZNF165 zinc finger protein 165 7718 NM_003447 207563_s_at OGT O-linked N-acetylglucosamine 8473 U77413 (GlcNAc) transferase (UDP-N- acetylglucosamine:polypeptide-N- acetylglucosaminyl transferase) 207564_x_at OGT O-linked N-acetylglucosamine 8473 NM_003605 (GlcNAc) transferase (UDP-N- acetylglucosamine:polypeptide-N- acetylglucosaminyl transferase) 208523_x_at HIST1H2BI histone cluster 1, H2bi 8346 NM_003525 208527_x_at HIST1H2BE histone cluster 1, H2be 8344 NM_003523 208707_at EIF5 eukaryotic translation initiation 1983 BE552334 factor 5 208820_at PTK2 PTK2 protein tyrosine kinase 2 5747 AL037339 208891_at DUSP6 dual specificity phosphatase 6 1848 BC003143 208892_s_at DUSP6 dual specificity phosphatase 6 1848 BC003143 208988_at KDM2A lysine (K)-specific demethylase 2A 22992 BE675843 209020_at C20orf111 chromosome 20 open reading 51526 AF217514 frame 111 209146_at SC4MOL sterol-C4-methyl oxidase-like 6307 AV704962 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple 11030 D84109 splicing 209560_s_at DLK1 delta-like 1 homolog (Drosophila) 8788 U15979 209676_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor 7035 J03225 (lipoprotein-associated coagulation inhibitor) 209728_at HLA- major histocompatibility complex, 3126 BC005312 DRB4 class II, DR beta 4 209907_s_at ITSN2 intersectin 2 50618 AF182198 209911_x_at HIST1H2BD histone cluster 1, H2bd 3017 BC002842 209993_at ABCB1 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B 5243 AF016535 (MDR/TAP), member 1 209994_s_at ABCB1 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B 5243 /// AF016535 /// (MDR/TAP), member 1 /// ATP- 5244 ABCB4 binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 4 210664_s_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor 7035 AF021834 (lipoprotein-associated coagulation inhibitor) 210665_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor 7035 AF021834 (lipoprotein-associated coagulation inhibitor) 210942_s_at ST3GAL6 ST3 beta-galactoside alpha-2,3- 10402 AB022918 sialyltransferase 6 211597_s_at HOPX HOP homeobox 84525 AB059408 212071_s_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 BE968833 212176_at SFRS18 splicing factor, arginine/serine-rich 25957 AA902326 18 212179_at SFRS18 splicing factor, arginine/serine-rich 25957 AW157501 18 212314_at SEL1L3 sel-1 suppressor of lin-12-like 3 (C. elegans) 23231 AB018289 212488_at COL5A1 collagen, type V, alpha 1 1289 N30339 212750_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory 26051 AB020630 (inhibitor) subunit 16B 212764_at ZEB1 zinc finger E-box binding 6935 AI806174 homeobox 1 212958_x_at PAM peptidylglycine alpha-amidating 5066 AI022882 monooxygenase 213056_at FRMD4B FERM domain containing 4B 23150 AU145019 213094_at GPR126 G protein-coupled receptor 126 57211 AL033377 213355_at ST3GAL6 ST3 beta-galactoside alpha-2,3- 10402 AI989567 sialyltransferase 6 213510_x_at LOC220594 TL132 protein 220594 AW194543 213541_s_at ERG v-ets erythroblastosis virus E26 2078 AI351043 oncogene homolog (avian) 213714_at CACNB2 calcium channel, voltage- 783 AI040163 dependent, beta 2 subunit 213750_at RSL1D1 ribosomal L1 domain containing 1 26156 AA928506 213844_at HOXA5 homeobox A5 3202 NM_019102 214327_x_at TPT1 tumor protein, translationally- 7178 AI888178 controlled 1 214349_at — — — AV764378 215388_s_at CFH /// complement factor H /// 3075 /// X56210 CFHR1 complement factor H-related 1 3078 215779_s_at HIST1H2BG histone cluster 1, H2bg 8339 BE271470 217975_at WBP5 WW domain binding protein 5 51186 NM_016303 218280_x_at HIST2H2AA3 histone cluster 2, H2aa3 /// 723790 NM_003516 /// histone cluster 2, H2aa4 /// 8337 HIST2H2AA4 218332_at BEX1 brain expressed, X-linked 1 55859 NM_018476 218379_at RBM7 RNA binding motif protein 7 10179 NM_016090 218627_at DRAM1 DNA-damage regulated autophagy 55332 NM_018370 modulator 1 218723_s_at C13orf15 chromosome 13 open reading 28984 NM_014059 frame 15 218764_at PRKCH protein kinase C, eta 5583 NM_024064 218772_x_at TMEM38B transmembrane protein 38B 55151 NM_018112 218899_s_at BAALC brain and acute leukemia, 79870 NM_024812 cytoplasmic 218901_at PLSCR4 phospholipid scramblase 4 57088 NM_020353 218966_at MYO5C myosin VC 55930 NM_018728 218971_s_at WDR91 WD repeat domain 91 29062 NM_014149 219054_at C5orf23 chromosome 5 open reading 79614 NM_024563 frame 23 219497_s_at BCL11A B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11A (zinc 53335 NM_022893 finger protein) 219559_at SLC17A9 solute carrier family 17, member 9 63910 NM_022082 219648_at MREG melanoregulin 55686 NM_018000 220122_at MCTP1 multiple C2 domains, 79772 NM_024717 transmembrane 1 220416_at ATP8B4 ATPase, class I, type 8B, member 4 79895 NM_024837 221458_at HTR1F 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) 3355 NM_000866 receptor 1F 221773_at ELK3 ELK3, ETS-domain protein (SRF 2004 AW575374 accessory protein 2) 221833_at LONP2 Lon peptidase 2, peroxisomal 83752 AI971258 221841_s_at KLF4 Kruppel-like factor 4 (gut) 9314 BF514079 221942_s_at GUCY1A3 guanylate cyclase 1, soluble, alpha 3 2982 AI719730 222067_x_at HIST1H2BD histone cluster 1, H2bd 3017 AL353759 222164_at FGFR1 fibroblast growth factor receptor 1 2260 AU145411 222315_at — — — AW972855 41577_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory 26051 AB020630 (inhibitor) subunit 16B 60084_at CYLD cylindromatosis (turban tumor 1540 AI453099 syndrome) 200033_at DDX5 DEAD (Asp-Glu-Ala-Asp) box 1655 NM_004396 polypeptide 5 222735_at TMEM38B transmembrane protein 38B 55151 AW452608 222815_at RLIM ring finger protein, LIM domain 51132 BE966018 interacting 225629_s_at ZBTB4 zinc finger and BTB domain 57659 AI669498 containing 4 226206_at MAFK v-maf musculoaponeurotic 7975 BG231691 fibrosarcoma oncogene homolog K (avian) 226420_at MECOM MDS1 and EVI1 complex locus 2122 BG261252 226545_at CD109 CD109 molecule 135228 AL110152 226547_at MYST3 MYST histone acetyltransferase 7994 AI817830 (monocytic leukemia) 3 226985_at FGD5 FYVE, RhoGEF and PH domain 152273 AW269340 containing 5 228465_at — — — T79942 228570_at BTBD11 BTB (POZ) domain containing 11 121551 BF510581 228857_at GNL1 guanine nucleotide binding 2794 AA775731 protein-like 1 228904_at HOXB3 homeobox B3 3213 AW510657 228915_at DACH1 dachshund homolog 1 1602 AI650353 (Drosophila) 229287_at PCNX pecanex homolog (Drosophila) 22990 BE326214 229344_x_at RIMKLB ribosomal modification protein 57494 AW135012 rimK-like family member B 230389_at FNBP1 formin binding protein 1 23048 BE046511 230698_at CALN1 calneuron 1 83698 AW072102 230788_at GCNT2 glucosaminyl (N-acetyl) 2651 BF059748 transferase 2, I-branching enzyme (I blood group) 232098_at DST dystonin 667 AK025142 232231_at RUNX2 runt-related transcription factor 2 860 AL353944 234994_at TMEM200A transmembrane protein 200A 114801 AA088177 235048_at FAM169A family with sequence similarity 26049 AV720650 169, member A 235199_at RNF125 ring finger protein 125 54941 AI969697 235252_at KSR1 kinase suppressor of ras 1 8844 AI090141 235490_at TMEM107 transmembrane protein 107 84314 AV743951 235826_at — — — AI693281 236193_at HIST1H2BC histone cluster 1, H2bc 8347 AA037483 238041_at TCF12 transcription factor 12 6938 AA151712 238488_at IPO11 importin 11 /// leucine rich repeat 100130733 BF511602 /// containing 70 /// LRRC70 51194 238633_at — — — W93523 238974_at C2orf69 chromosome 2 open reading 205327 N47077 frame 69 239328_at — — — AW512339 239451_at — — — AI684643 239835_at KBTBD8 kelch repeat and BTB (POZ) 84541 AA669114 domain containing 8 240165_at — — — AI678013 241756_at — — — T51136 243010_at MSI2 musashi homolog 2 (Drosophila) 124540 BE000929 243092_at LOC100288730 hypothetical LOC100288730 100288730 AI140189 243835_at ZDHHC21 zinc finger, DHHC-type containing 340481 BE467787 21 244110_at MLL Myeloid/lymphoid or mixed- 4297 BE669782 lineage leukemia (trithorax homolog, Drosophila) 244447_at — — — AW292830 244519_at ASXL1 additional sex combs like 1 171023 AI829840 (Drosophila)

TABLE 15 Summary of 7 additional patient samples used in generation of CD34+/CD38− vs CD34+/CD38+ signature Relapse or AML # Diagnosis FAB Age Sex Karyotype 17 Diag M2 83 m 49xy, +3, +9, +12 18 No data M4 No data No data No data 19 Diag M5b 47 m 8 20 Diag M0 70 f complex 21 Relapse M6 48 f normal 22 Diag M4 65 f complex 23 Diag M4 63 f normal

TABLE 16 Additive Correlation of LSC-R Probes and Patient Outcome p value - Rank in LSC-R correlation with gene list LSC probeID overall survival 1 220128_s_at 0.977682866 2 209488_s_at 0.194703224 3 215411_s_at 0.075914897 4 201702_s_at 0.138735935 5 201243_s_at 0.003708531 6 212676_at 7.47E−05 7 209487_at 7.14E−05 8 219871_at 0.000175004 9 207836_s_at 0.000151178 10 211113_s_at 0.000151178 11 214252_s_at 5.63E−06 12 212976_at 4.95E−05 13 213056_at 6.23E−05 14 207090_x_at 6.23E−05 15 221621_at 9.59E−05 16 218183_at 7.56E−05 17 216262_s_at 5.89E−05 18 204028_s_at 2.26E−05 19 208993_s_at 0.000107232 20 206582_s_at 0.000122344 21 205321_at 1.98E−05 22 209272_at 2.76E−06 23 218907_s_at 8.89E−06 24 201242_s_at 8.25E−06 25 41113_at 8.57E−07 26 202646_s_at 8.57E−07 27 215557_at 8.57E−07 28 212875_s_at 7.94E−06 29 219236_at 2.90E−06 30 213861_s_at 4.39E−06 31 221483_s_at 7.23E−07 32 214197_s_at 4.05E−06 33 205256_at 1.52E−06 34 207837_at 4.90E−07 35 214860_at 4.53E−07 36 211537_x_at 1.11E−06 37 213433_at 1.11E−06 38 207753_at 2.86E−06 39 212114_at 8.40E−06 40 214004_s_at 1.73E−05 41 208883_at 2.12E−06 42 219658_at 2.12E−06 43 213557_at 2.12E−06 44 203474_at 1.02E−05 45 214745_at 1.02E−05 46 202956_at 1.54E−06 47 211536_x_at 1.54E−06 48 209740_s_at 5.21E−06 49 34408_at 1.66E−05 50 201018_at 1.54E−06 51 214820_at 1.83E−06 52 212397_at 8.92E−07 53 221294_at 8.92E−07 54 219718_at 1.43E−06 55 209425_at 8.24E−07 56 220360_at 1.43E−06 57 213313_at 1.23E−06 58 204837_at 9.79E−07 59 205094_at 9.79E−07 60 211877_s_at 6.40E−06 61 205702_at 2.77E−05 62 212851_at 5.69E−05 63 206874_s_at 1.56E−05 64 219232_s_at 1.56E−05 65 201080_at 6.72E−05 66 209200_at 0.000222547 67 208634_s_at 0.001135991 68 205608_s_at 0.002585716 69 214738_s_at 0.002585716 70 207968_s_at 0.002585716 71 203106_s_at 0.002585716 72 213639_s_at 0.002585716 73 202599_s_at 0.0008893 74 211255_x_at 0.000836413 75 219383_at 0.000780115 76 207737_at 0.000615825 77 221020_s_at 0.000836413 78 206945_at 0.00057802 79 34726_at 0.000103453 80 210132_at 0.000103453 81 206061_s_at 0.00057802 82 212299_at 0.000992242 83 204592_at 0.000992242 84 209814_at 0.000714641 85 202629_at 0.000808658 86 205762_s_at 0.000808658 87 202817_s_at 0.000808658 88 218724_s_at 0.000714641 89 204217_s_at 0.00037038 90 219603_s_at 0.000808658 91 210694_s_at 0.000325071 92 212276_at 0.000325071 93 212678_at 0.000325071 94 207034_s_at 0.000191313 95 209199_s_at 0.002994201 96 208879_x_at 0.00038804 97 206822_s_at 0.00038804 98 212796_s_at 0.00036057 99 213322_at 0.000852069 100 213666_at 0.000504441

TABLE 17 Probe Set Name Probe Sequence Sequence ID No: 200033_at AGAATGGTGTTTACAGTGCTGCAAA SEQ ID NO: 1374 200033_at CAGTGCTGCAAATTACACCAATGGG SEQ ID NO: 1375 200033_at GAAGTAATTTTGTGTCTGCTGGTAT SEQ ID NO: 1376 200033_at AGGACTGGTAATCCAACAGGGACTT SEQ ID NO: 1377 200033_at GAATGGTTATGATAGCACTCAGCAA SEQ ID NO: 1378 200033_at TGCATATCCTGCTACTGCAGCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1379 200033_at GCAGCTGCACCTATGATTGGTTATC SEQ ID NO: 1380 200033_at TCCAATGCCAACAGGATATTCCCAA SEQ ID NO: 1381 200033_at GTCTGTTTTTCATAATTGCTCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1382 200033_at TATGGTGCACTTTTTCGCTATTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1383 200033_at AGTTGGATATTTCTCTACATTCCTG SEQ ID NO: 1384 200033_at AGAATGGTGTTTACAGTGCTGCAAA SEQ ID NO: 1385 200033_at CAGTGCTGCAAATTACACCAATGGG SEQ ID NO: 1386 200033_at GAAGTAATTTTGTGTCTGCTGGTAT SEQ ID NO: 1387 200033_at AGGACTGGTAATCCAACAGGGACTT SEQ ID NO: 1388 200033_at GAATGGTTATGATAGCACTCAGCAA SEQ ID NO: 1389 200033_at TGCATATCCTGCTACTGCAGCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1390 200033_at GCAGCTGCACCTATGATTGGTTATC SEQ ID NO: 1391 200033_at TCCAATGCCAACAGGATATTCCCAA SEQ ID NO: 1392 200033_at GTCTGTTTTTCATAATTGCTCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1393 200033_at TATGGTGCACTTTTTCGCTATTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1394 200033_at AGTTGGATATTTCTCTACATTCCTG SEQ ID NO: 1395 200962_at GATATGAGTCTGCATGGCCTCAGGA SEQ ID NO: 1396 200962_at GATTTTAGGTTGTCTGCACTCTAGC SEQ ID NO: 1397 200962_at GCACTCTAGCTTTTTTGTCGTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 1398 200962_at ATACATCATATCTTAATTTCCACTG SEQ ID NO: 1399 200962_at TCTACACGGCCGGGGTTTCAACAAG SEQ ID NO: 1400 200962_at ACAAGGTACTGATGTCTTCTGCCCT SEQ ID NO: 1401 200962_at TGCCCTTGCCTCTTCGACAGGCAAG SEQ ID NO: 1402 200962_at ATTCTTTAGGCACACAAATTCACAT SEQ ID NO: 1403 200962_at CATTATACTTCCTGATCTGTGATTG SEQ ID NO: 1404 200962_at TCGTAACTAGTATGTCTGTCCCACC SEQ ID NO: 1405 200962_at TATGTCTGTCCCACCTTTAAAAAGT SEQ ID NO: 1406 201466_s_at AAATCACTCTCAGTGCTTCTTACTA SEQ ID NO: 1407 201466_s_at GCAGTAAAAACTGTTCTCTATTAGA SEQ ID NO: 1408 201466_s_at ATGTACCTGATGTACCTGATGCTAT SEQ ID NO: 1409 201466_s_at ATCTATATGGAATTGCTTACCAAAG SEQ ID NO: 1410 201466_s_at TAGTGCGATGTTTCAGGAGGCTGGA SEQ ID NO: 1411 201466_s_at AGCCCACTGAGAAGTCAAACATTTC SEQ ID NO: 1412 201466_s_at GTGGCATGTGCTGTGACCATTTATA SEQ ID NO: 1413 201466_s_at TTTACAATAGGTGCTTATTCTCAAA SEQ ID NO: 1414 201466_s_at AGGTGCTTATTCTCAAAGCAGGAAT SEQ ID NO: 1415 201466_s_at GCAGGAATTGGTGGCAGATTTTACA SEQ ID NO: 1416 201466_s_at CTTCTCTTTGACAATTCCTAGATAA SEQ ID NO: 1417 201625_s_at TAGCAGCCCTATCTTTGGGCCTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1418 201625_s_at GGGCCTTTGGTGGACATTTGATCGT SEQ ID NO: 1419 201625_s_at TGATCGTTCCAGAAGTGGCCTTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1420 201625_s_at GGCTGGGGATCACCATAGCTTTTCT SEQ ID NO: 1421 201625_s_at TAGCTACGCTGATCACGCAGTTTCT SEQ ID NO: 1422 201625_s_at TTCCTCTATATTCGTTCTTGGCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1423 201625_s_at TTTTCTCAGGAGGCGTCACGGTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1424 201625_s_at GTTCCTGAAAAGCCCCATAGTGATT SEQ ID NO: 1425 201625_s_at GGGCTGACTGTACAAATGACTCCTG SEQ ID NO: 1426 201625_s_at GATGACTTACCCTGAAGTCTTCCCT SEQ ID NO: 1427 201625_s_at CTTCCCAAGTATTCGATTTCATTCA SEQ ID NO: 1428 201695_s_at TCCCACACAAGACCCAAGTAGCTGC SEQ ID NO: 1429 201695_s_at CCAAGTAGCTGCTACCTTCTTTGGC SEQ ID NO: 1430 201695_s_at TCTACCAGACCCTTCTGGTGCCAGA SEQ ID NO: 1431 201695_s_at TCATTCCTGTTCTTTCTTACACAAG SEQ ID NO: 1432 201695_s_at GACTCGGGCCTTAGAACTTTGCATA SEQ ID NO: 1433 201695_s_at ATAGCAGCTGCTACTAGCTCTTTGA SEQ ID NO: 1434 201695_s_at ATACATTCCGAGGGGCTCAGTTCTG SEQ ID NO: 1435 201695_s_at GCTTCTCACTCATCACTAACAAGGT SEQ ID NO: 1436 201695_s_at GAACAGTTTGTCTCCATTCTTATGG SEQ ID NO: 1437 201695_s_at TCCATTCTTATGGCCAGCATTCCAC SEQ ID NO: 1438 201695_s_at ACTCCCTGACAAAGCCAGTTGACCT SEQ ID NO: 1439 201917_s_at TTCAGACTCTATCTTTGCTTGTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1440 201917_s_at TGGGTCTCTTTATCGTGGTCTGACA SEQ ID NO: 1441 201917_s_at CGTGGTCTGACAACTCATCTAGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1442 201917_s_at GAATTGGTGGTTTACCTACTCAATG SEQ ID NO: 1443 201917_s_at GCAGCACGAGGACTGCTGTACTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1444 201917_s_at ATCACACCACATTACTTGGCCTTTC SEQ ID NO: 1445 201917_s_at GGGCATGTCTGCTTCATATGCTGGT SEQ ID NO: 1446 201917_s_at ATCAGAGACTGTTATCCATTTTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1447 201917_s_at GTGGGAATGATGCTAGCTGCTGCCA SEQ ID NO: 1448 201917_s_at GCTGCCACCTCAAAAACTTGTGCCA SEQ ID NO: 1449 201917_s_at GCCACAACTATAGCATATCCACATG SEQ ID NO: 1450 201952_at ACCTGCTCTCCACAATAAATCACAA SEQ ID NO: 1451 201952_at ACAGCTGTCAGAACCTCGAGAGCAG SEQ ID NO: 1452 201952_at ACTCAGAGCTCTGGACCGAAAGCAG SEQ ID NO: 1453 201952_at ATTACCATCGATTCAGTGCCTGGAT SEQ ID NO: 1454 201952_at GCTTACTTGTTTAATGGCAGCCACA SEQ ID NO: 1455 201952_at GGCAGCCACATGCACGAAGATGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1456 201952_at GAATTCCAAATCCTCAACTTTTGAG SEQ ID NO: 1457 201952_at ACTTTTGAGGTTTCGGCTCTCCAAT SEQ ID NO: 1458 201952_at TTCGGCTCTCCAATTTAACTCTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1459 201952_at AGTTCAAGGTTCACTCCCTATATGT SEQ ID NO: 1460 201952_at GATTAACATACCCGTCTATGCCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1461 202724_s_at GAGCAGTAAATCAATGGAACATCCC SEQ ID NO: 1462 202724_s_at ACAAATTGGACTTGTTCAACTGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1463 202724_s_at CAGCCCCAACTTAAAATTCTTACAT SEQ ID NO: 1464 202724_s_at ACAGACCAACCTGGCATTACAGTTG SEQ ID NO: 1465 202724_s_at TTGGCCTCTCCTTGAGGTGGGCACA SEQ ID NO: 1466 202724_s_at GCCAGGGGTGGCCATGTAAGTCCCA SEQ ID NO: 1467 202724_s_at GCTACCCGAGTTTAGTAACAGTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1468 202724_s_at AACAGTGCAGATTCCACGTTCTTGT SEQ ID NO: 1469 202724_s_at CGTTCTTGTTCCGATACTCTGAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1470 202724_s_at GATGTTGATGTACTTACAGACACAA SEQ ID NO: 1471 202724_s_at GACACAAGAACAATCTTTGCTATAA SEQ ID NO: 1472 202822_at CTCTTGTCAAATCTGTGTCGGCTGC SEQ ID NO: 1473 202822_at CCCTGATCCTTCCATTATCAAGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1474 202822_at ACTGATGTAACCTCAAAGCCTCTCA SEQ ID NO: 1475 202822_at TCACCATTCCTCTTGGCTTGGAAAG SEQ ID NO: 1476 202822_at ACAAGCGATTGTCCATCTGTTGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1477 202822_at CCTGCTTTAGCCATCTGTGGGAAAC SEQ ID NO: 1478 202822_at GACACCTCTGCAAAATGTGCCTCAA SEQ ID NO: 1479 202822_at GTGCCTCAAGTCCATTTCTTGGGAT SEQ ID NO: 1480 202822_at CATTTCTTGGGATCGCTCGTTTGGT SEQ ID NO: 1481 202822_at GTTTGGTGCACTCTCGTGGGAGACA SEQ ID NO: 1482 202822_at AACATATACTTGTGCCTTATTTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1483 202842_s_at GTTTGATATTTACCACAGCGCTGTG SEQ ID NO: 1484 202842_s_at GCGCTGTGCCTTTCTACAGTAGAAC SEQ ID NO: 1485 202842_s_at GGTTTTATTGCCCATAGTCATTTAG SEQ ID NO: 1486 202842_s_at ATATTTCTTTCTTAGTTGTTGGCAC SEQ ID NO: 1487 202842_s_at GTTGTTGGCACTCTTAGGTCTTAGT SEQ ID NO: 1488 202842_s_at GTGTGTGTGTAGTTTATCCTCTCTC SEQ ID NO: 1489 202842_s_at GATTGACTGATACCTCATTCTGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1490 202842_s_at AATTTCTGTGCAACCTTACTATGTG SEQ ID NO: 1491 202842_s_at GTGTGCTTTTGTTTTCGGATAGACT SEQ ID NO: 1492 202842_s_at ATTTCTTTAGTTCTGCACTTTTCCA SEQ ID NO: 1493 202842_s_at CACTTTTCCACATTATACTCCATAT SEQ ID NO: 1494 202932_at TGGCAGTGGTTCTGGTACTAAAAAT SEQ ID NO: 1495 202932_at GTTCTGGTACTAAAAATTGTGGTTG SEQ ID NO: 1496 202932_at TTTTCTGTTTACGTAACCTGCTTAG SEQ ID NO: 1497 202932_at ACGTAACCTGCTTAGTATTGACACT SEQ ID NO: 1498 202932_at AACCTGCTTAGTATTGACACTCTCT SEQ ID NO: 1499 202932_at GCTTAGTATTGACACTCTCTACCAA SEQ ID NO: 1500 202932_at GACACTCTCTACCAAGAGGGTCTTC SEQ ID NO: 1501 202932_at CTCTACCAAGAGGGTCTTCCTAAGA SEQ ID NO: 1502 202932_at CTTCCTAAGAAGAGTGCTGTCATTA SEQ ID NO: 1503 202932_at GAGTGCTGTCATTATTTCCTCTTAT SEQ ID NO: 1504 202932_at TTTCCTCTTATCAACAACTTGTGAC SEQ ID NO: 1505 203372_s_at GAGATAGCTCGCATTCAGACTACCT SEQ ID NO: 1506 203372_s_at CTCGCATTCAGACTACCTACTAACA SEQ ID NO: 1507 203372_s_at TCAGCTGGACCAACTAATCTTCGAA SEQ ID NO: 1508 203372_s_at AAATTCAGATTGGACTCTATCATAT SEQ ID NO: 1509 203372_s_at ATCATATGTGTCAAATCCAAGCTTA SEQ ID NO: 1510 203372_s_at GTGTGGTTCATCTGATCGACTACTA SEQ ID NO: 1511 203372_s_at TCGACTACTATGTTCAGATGTGCAA SEQ ID NO: 1512 203372_s_at TAAGCGGACAGGTCCAGAAGCCCCC SEQ ID NO: 1513 203372_s_at ACTGTTCACCTTTATCTGACCAAAC SEQ ID NO: 1514 203372_s_at CTGACCAAACCGCTCTACACGTCAG SEQ ID NO: 1515 203372_s_at TTAACAAATGTACCGGTGCCATCTG SEQ ID NO: 1516 203394_s_at AGGATCCGGAGCTGGTGCTGATAAC SEQ ID NO: 1517 203394_s_at TGCTGATAACAGCGGAATCCCCCGT SEQ ID NO: 1518 203394_s_at TTGGTCCTGGAACAGCGCTACTGAT SEQ ID NO: 1519 203394_s_at GTCCTGGAACAGCGCTACTGATCAC SEQ ID NO: 1520 203394_s_at GGAACAGCGCTACTGATCACCAAGT SEQ ID NO: 1521 203394_s_at TCACCAAGTAGCCACAAAATATAAT SEQ ID NO: 1522 203394_s_at TATAATAAACCCTCAGCACTTGCTC SEQ ID NO: 1523 203394_s_at ATAAACCCTCAGCACTTGCTCAGTA SEQ ID NO: 1524 203394_s_at AACCCTCAGCACTTGCTCAGTAGTT SEQ ID NO: 1525 203394_s_at CAGCACTTGCTCAGTAGTTTTGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1526 203394_s_at GTAGTTTTGTGAAAGTCTCAAGTAA SEQ ID NO: 1527 203875_at GATTTAACATTGTTGGGCCATTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1528 203875_at AAATGTGCATATTGGAGCAGAACAT SEQ ID NO: 1529 203875_at ATCTGTTTCCATTTTAGTCACAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1530 203875_at ACAATGCTTTCTACCTGAAATGTGT SEQ ID NO: 1531 203875_at CCTCTCAGTCCTTGTTCTTTTGAAG SEQ ID NO: 1532 203875_at GTCCTTGTTCTTTTGAAGCTTGTGC SEQ ID NO: 1533 203875_at GCTTGTGCTGAGGTTTTAGCTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 1534 203875_at GTGCTGAGGTTTTAGCTTTTCTATG SEQ ID NO: 1535 203875_at GCCGCTGCTTTGAAAGAGAACCTAG SEQ ID NO: 1536 203875_at GAGAACCTAGATTCTATAGTTGTAT SEQ ID NO: 1537 203875_at TATTATTGTTGTTTCATACTTTAAA SEQ ID NO: 1538 205453_at GGTCCCTTTTTCCGAGGAAGAGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1539 205453_at ATTTTTTCACCAGTACGCTCTGTGC SEQ ID NO: 1540 205453_at CTCCTTGGCCGTCTACTGGAAAAAT SEQ ID NO: 1541 205453_at ACTGGAAAAATCGAGCCTCTCCCAC SEQ ID NO: 1542 205453_at CCACCCTCAGTCGCATAGACTTATG SEQ ID NO: 1543 205453_at GAATTAGCGTTTAATCCACTTCCTT SEQ ID NO: 1544 205453_at TATTGGGCACTCGGTTATCTTTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1545 205453_at TTCCGTTTGGTAGACTCCTTCCAAT SEQ ID NO: 1546 205453_at GGTAGACTCCTTCCAATGAAATCTC SEQ ID NO: 1547 205453_at CCCGGGCCATTGCCAGAAGACGTCT SEQ ID NO: 1548 205453_at GCCAGAAGACGTCTTCTCGGGGCGC SEQ ID NO: 1549 205501_at ATGCTTGCCCAACACACTGTGAAAT SEQ ID NO: 1550 205501_at ATGCAGCATCTTCATTCTTTCTGAG SEQ ID NO: 1551 205501_at GATGGTTTTCTTTACATGAACAAAT SEQ ID NO: 1552 205501_at GAGATCCTAGATCCATAACGTAGCT SEQ ID NO: 1553 205501_at AAGGCATCTAAGAGTTTGCTGTTGA SEQ ID NO: 1554 205501_at TGCTGTTGATAATCTTGCTGACCAA SEQ ID NO: 1555 205501_at GTAACACAGGTTATATGCCATCACA SEQ ID NO: 1556 205501_at ATGCCATCACAAATACAATGCTCAT SEQ ID NO: 1557 205501_at AGAGTCAATGAACCTGTGTCCAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1558 205501_at AGAGGTCTTAACTTTGCATTTATAA SEQ ID NO: 1559 205501_at TCATTTGCAGTCTTTGTATTTAAAA SEQ ID NO: 1560 206099_at ATGATGAGGTGGTCTACCCTACCTG SEQ ID NO: 1561 206099_at CCCTACCTGGCTCCATGAAGATGCC SEQ ID NO: 1562 206099_at CAGGGAGGCGAGCACGCCATCTTGA SEQ ID NO: 1563 206099_at GCCATCTTGAGACATCCTTTTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1564 206099_at TTAAGGAAATCGACTGGGCCCAGCT SEQ ID NO: 1565 206099_at GAACCATCGCCAAATAGAACCGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1566 206099_at TCAGACCCAGAATCAAATCCCGAGA SEQ ID NO: 1567 206099_at AGAAACTTTTCCTATGTGTCTCCAG SEQ ID NO: 1568 206099_at GTGTCTCCAGAATTGCAACCATAGC SEQ ID NO: 1569 206099_at CCAGGAATTTCCTCTATCGGACCTT SEQ ID NO: 1570 206099_at CTTCCCAGCATCAGCCTTAGAACAA SEQ ID NO: 1571 206310_at CTCTGATCCCTCAATTTGGTCTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1572 206310_at ATAGAACGCCAAACTGCTCTCAGTA SEQ ID NO: 1573 206310_at TAGATTACCAGGATGTCCCAGACAC SEQ ID NO: 1574 206310_at TCCCAGACACTTTAACCCTGTGTGT SEQ ID NO: 1575 206310_at CCCTGTGTGTGGCAGTGACATGTCC SEQ ID NO: 1576 206310_at GTGACATGTCCACTTATGCCAATGA SEQ ID NO: 1577 206310_at CATTCGAAATGGACCCTGCTGATGG SEQ ID NO: 1578 206310_at GGCGCAGGTAACAGACCGCAGGGGC SEQ ID NO: 1579 206310_at AGAATCCTTGTTTCTTGGCTTTTGC SEQ ID NO: 1580 206310_at TCTTGGCTTTTGCTCCTGGAGTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1581 206310_at GAGTTAAGCTTACTGCCCAGGTGAC SEQ ID NO: 1582 206674_at GATGGCCGTGTTTCGGAATGTCCTC SEQ ID NO: 1583 206674_at TCCTCACACCTACCAAAACAGGCGA SEQ ID NO: 1584 206674_at AAACAGGCGACCTTTCAGCAGAGAG SEQ ID NO: 1585 206674_at AGATGGATTTGGGGCTACTCTCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1586 206674_at CTCCGCAGGCTCAGGTCGAAGATTC SEQ ID NO: 1587 206674_at TAGTTTTAAGGACTTCATCCCTCCA SEQ ID NO: 1588 206674_at CCACCTATCCCTAACAGGCTGTAGA SEQ ID NO: 1589 206674_at TTATCAACTGCTGCTTCACCAGACT SEQ ID NO: 1590 206674_at TTTCTCTAGAAGCCGTCTGCGTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1591 206674_at GGAGCATTGATCTGCATCCAAGGCC SEQ ID NO: 1592 206674_at GGCCGGCTTGAGTGAATTGTGTACC SEQ ID NO: 1593 207563_s_at AGCGTGTTCCCAATAGTGTACTCTG SEQ ID NO: 1594 207563_s_at TACTCTGGCTGTTGCGTTTTCCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1595 207563_s_at GCCCCAGAACCGTATCATTTTTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1596 207563_s_at GAGGAACACGTCAGGAGAGGCCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1597 207563_s_at GGACACTCCACTCTGTAATGGGCAC SEQ ID NO: 1598 207563_s_at GATGGATGTCCTCTGGGCAGGGACC SEQ ID NO: 1599 207563_s_at ACCCCCATGGTGACTATGCCAGGAG SEQ ID NO: 1600 207563_s_at AGGAGAGACTCTTGCTTCTCGAGTT SEQ ID NO: 1601 207563_s_at ATCCCAGCTCACTTGCTTAGGTTGT SEQ ID NO: 1602 207563_s_at GAGCGGCTCTATCTACAGATGTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1603 207563_s_at TGCAGCTGGCAACAAACCTGACCAC SEQ ID NO: 1604 207564_x_at TCAGTCTTCTGGATTTTTTTTTCTT SEQ ID NO: 1605 207564_x_at TAAGCTAAAATGTTACTCCCTGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1606 207564_x_at TACTCCCTGTTTTAGTTTCTGAACT SEQ ID NO: 1607 207564_x_at GGGACTTTGCTGGTGTAGTCTTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1608 207564_x_at ACCACTTGAGCCTATATCAGTCGTT SEQ ID NO: 1609 207564_x_at ATCAGTCGTTTTAGTGTCTGACCTA SEQ ID NO: 1610 207564_x_at GTCTGACCTAATATTTGGAGCTATC SEQ ID NO: 1611 207564_x_at GGAGCTATCAGTGCTTTGTTGATTT SEQ ID NO: 1612 207564_x_at AGATTTTTTCTGGTCCATTTCCCAT SEQ ID NO: 1613 207564_x_at TCACCCTTAAAATTCTCCTGTAACT SEQ ID NO: 1614 207564_x_at AAGCCTGATTCAAAACATCCTAGGG SEQ ID NO: 1615 208523_x_at GGAGAGCTATTCCGTGTACGTGTAC SEQ ID NO: 1616 208523_x_at CAAGGTGCTGAAGCAGGTCCACCCC SEQ ID NO: 1617 208523_x_at GCCTGAACCAGCTAAGTCAGCTCCC SEQ ID NO: 1618 208523_x_at CATCTCGTCCAAGGCTATGGGGATT SEQ ID NO: 1619 208523_x_at GATTATGAACTCCTTCGTCAACGAC SEQ ID NO: 1620 208523_x_at TTTTCGAGCGCATTGCAGGCGAGGC SEQ ID NO: 1621 208523_x_at TCCCGCCTGGCGCATTATAACAAGC SEQ ID NO: 1622 208523_x_at TTATAACAAGCGCTCGACCATCACT SEQ ID NO: 1623 208523_x_at CCAGGGAGATCCAAACGGCTGTGCG SEQ ID NO: 1624 208523_x_at AAACACGCGGTGTCGGAGGGCACCA SEQ ID NO: 1625 208523_x_at GAAGGGCTCCAAGAAGGCGGTGACC SEQ ID NO: 1626 208527_x_at AAGCGCAGCCGCAAGGAGAGCTACT SEQ ID NO: 1627 208527_x_at GAGAGCTACTCCGTATACGTGTACA SEQ ID NO: 1628 208527_x_at ATGCCTGAGCCAGCGAAATCCGCTC SEQ ID NO: 1629 208527_x_at GCATCTCCTCTAAAGCCATGGGGAT SEQ ID NO: 1630 208527_x_at TGTCAACGACATCTTCGAGCGCATC SEQ ID NO: 1631 208527_x_at GCATTACAACAAGCGCTCGACCATC SEQ ID NO: 1632 208527_x_at TCGACCATCACCTCCAGGGAGATCC SEQ ID NO: 1633 208527_x_at GGCCAAGCACGCTGTGTCAGAGGGC SEQ ID NO: 1634 208527_x_at GTCAGAGGGCACCAAGGCCGTTACC SEQ ID NO: 1635 208527_x_at TTACCAAGTACACCAGCTCCAAGTA SEQ ID NO: 1636 208527_x_at GAAGGGCTCCAAGAAGGCCGTGACC SEQ ID NO: 1637 208707_at GTTGACCCTGCAGTTCGGTTATGCA SEQ ID NO: 1638 208707_at GAGGATTCACTTGGGTGTTGGGATC SEQ ID NO: 1639 208707_at CAAATTTGGATTCTGTCCCAGGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1640 208707_at TTCTGTCCCAGGCCTTACTGTAAAA SEQ ID NO: 1641 208707_at ACTAGGGGATTGCCTTTCCATATCT SEQ ID NO: 1642 208707_at CATATCTGCTGGGGGTGGAGACCCT SEQ ID NO: 1643 208707_at CACTCAATCCCACTGGAAGCCTAAT SEQ ID NO: 1644 208707_at GAAGCAATGCCTGGCTGGGGCAGTA SEQ ID NO: 1645 208707_at ATTCCACCCAATTTTGCTATGAGCC SEQ ID NO: 1646 208707_at GCTATGAGCCTAAAACCTCTTTAAA SEQ ID NO: 1647 208707_at ACACTGTTTACAAGAGCATCACCTA SEQ ID NO: 1648 208820_at TGCAATATGCTAATCCCACTTTACA SEQ ID NO: 1649 208820_at ACCTGCCTTTTACTTTCGTGTGGAT SEQ ID NO: 1650 208820_at TATGTGAAGCATTGGGTCGGGAACT SEQ ID NO: 1651 208820_at GGGTCGGGAACTAGCTGTAGAACAC SEQ ID NO: 1652 208820_at GAATAATGTGCCAGTTTTTTGTAGC SEQ ID NO: 1653 208820_at AAATGCTTTGTACCAGAGCACCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1654 208820_at CAGAGCACCTCCAAACTGCATTGAG SEQ ID NO: 1655 208820_at AAAGCCATGTTGACTATTTTACAGC SEQ ID NO: 1656 208820_at ACAGCCACTGGAGTTAACTAACCCT SEQ ID NO: 1657 208820_at TTTCTTTTGATGTCCAGTTACACCA SEQ ID NO: 1658 208820_at GTTACACCATCCATTCTGTTAATTT SEQ ID NO: 1659 208891_at AATTGTGCTCTTTTCTAATCCAAAG SEQ ID NO: 1660 208891_at CAAAGGGTATATTTGCAGCATGCTT SEQ ID NO: 1661 208891_at AATAAAAAAACCTTCAGCTGTGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1662 208891_at CTGTGCTAAACAGTATATTACCTCT SEQ ID NO: 1663 208891_at ATATTACCTCTGTATAAAATTCTTC SEQ ID NO: 1664 208891_at AATTCTTCAGGGAGTGTCACCTCAA SEQ ID NO: 1665 208891_at GAGTGTCACCTCAAATGCAATACTT SEQ ID NO: 1666 208891_at TGCAATACTTTGGGTTGGTTTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1667 208891_at GTGTGTGAGCATGGGTACCCATTTG SEQ ID NO: 1668 208891_at ATGGGTACCCATTTGATAAGAGAAA SEQ ID NO: 1669 208891_at AATTCTCCATTATGTTCGTGGTGTA SEQ ID NO: 1670 208988_at GTTGCTGATTTAGAGTCAATCTCCA SEQ ID NO: 1671 208988_at TAGAGTCAATCTCCAATGTTGTGCT SEQ ID NO: 1672 208988_at GGGATAAGTCTTATGCTATCTCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1673 208988_at TATGCTATCTCAGTTGACACATTGA SEQ ID NO: 1674 208988_at CAGTTGACACATTGAGGTTATTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1675 208988_at GAAGCTAGTTGGACTTTGTTTTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1676 208988_at TGTTTTCCAAAAGTTCTCCACTATT SEQ ID NO: 1677 208988_at AAGTTCTCCACTATTGGTTTTAGAG SEQ ID NO: 1678 208988_at AGCAAGGACATCTTTCCTCTGACAC SEQ ID NO: 1679 208988_at ACGTGGGAATGGGTGATATTTGTGT SEQ ID NO: 1680 208988_at GAAATAGCCTCCAATGGGAAATATT SEQ ID NO: 1681 209020_at GTGAGAAGACATCTCTTTCTGCTCA SEQ ID NO: 1682 209020_at CAGGGGCAGTCGTTGAGCCTTTGAG SEQ ID NO: 1683 209020_at CCCCAAGCAAGTCTCAAAGCCAGTG SEQ ID NO: 1684 209020_at CAGTGATCTCTCTGACTTTCAATCA SEQ ID NO: 1685 209020_at ACCAGGGGCAAGCCATGCACATGCA SEQ ID NO: 1686 209020_at TATTCCTTTTCAGGCCTGCAGAGTG SEQ ID NO: 1687 209020_at GGCTCCAGAACGAAGATCCACACTT SEQ ID NO: 1688 209020_at TTGAGGACTACTCTCAGTCGCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1689 209020_at ACGCCAGAACTCTGTCTGGCTCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1690 209020_at CCGATCCTGTTCTGAGCAAGCTCGA SEQ ID NO: 1691 209020_at GCAAGCTCGAGTCTTCGTGGATGAT SEQ ID NO: 1692 209146_at GAACCTCATCAATTGATAGCAGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1693 209146_at GTGAGTGACTGAAGCTTCCAAATCA SEQ ID NO: 1694 209146_at ATCAAGAAAAGCCGGCACCAAGAAC SEQ ID NO: 1695 209146_at GGCACCAAGAACTTCCATTCTAATC SEQ ID NO: 1696 209146_at TAATCTAGAGCTGACCAGTTTGAGC SEQ ID NO: 1697 209146_at GATTGCAGTGCAGTACTGGCATTTC SEQ ID NO: 1698 209146_at TTACCCTTCCATTTTTGTATATCAA SEQ ID NO: 1699 209146_at GTATATCAAATTTCCATTGTCATTA SEQ ID NO: 1700 209146_at GTATCTTGAAACTTTGTGAACTGAC SEQ ID NO: 1701 209146_at GTGAACTGACTTGCTGTATTTGCAC SEQ ID NO: 1702 209146_at GTATTTGCACTTTGAGCTCTTGAAA SEQ ID NO: 1703 209676_at TTCTATGCTTATTGTACTTGTTATC SEQ ID NO: 1704 209676_at ACACGTTTGTATCAGAGTTGCTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1705 209676_at GTATCAGAGTTGCTTTTCTAATCTT SEQ ID NO: 1706 209676_at AAATTGCTTATTCTAGGTCTGTAAT SEQ ID NO: 1707 209676_at TAATTTATTAACTGGCTACTGGGAA SEQ ID NO: 1708 209676_at ATTACTTATTTTCTGGATCTATCTG SEQ ID NO: 1709 209676_at AAATTATCATACTACCGGCTACATC SEQ ID NO: 1710 209676_at TACCGGCTACATCAAATCAGTCCTT SEQ ID NO: 1711 209676_at TCAGTCCTTTGATTCCATTTGGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1712 209676_at ATTCAGTCATTGGGAAATGCCGCCC SEQ ID NO: 1713 209676_at AATGCCGCCCATTTAAGTACAGTGG SEQ ID NO: 1714 209728_at CCCCTTGTGCCACACATTGCATTAT SEQ ID NO: 1715 209728_at CCCTTGTGCCACACATTGCATTATT SEQ ID NO: 1716 209728_at CTTGTGCCACACATTGCATTATTAA SEQ ID NO: 1717 209728_at GTGCCACACATTGCATTATTAAATG SEQ ID NO: 1718 209728_at GCATCCAAGCATGATGAGCCCTCTC SEQ ID NO: 1719 209728_at CATCCAAGCATGATGAGCCCTCTCA SEQ ID NO: 1720 209728_at AGCCCTCTCACGGTGCAATGGAGTG SEQ ID NO: 1721 209728_at GCCCTCTCACGGTGCAATGGAGTGC SEQ ID NO: 1722 209728_at CCCTCTCACGGTGCAATGGAGTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1723 209728_at GCAATGGAGTGCACGGTCTGAATCT SEQ ID NO: 1724 209728_at AGCCAACAGGACTCTTGAGCTGAAG SEQ ID NO: 1725 209907_s_at ATCTATGCAAACACCTTTCCCATAA SEQ ID NO: 1726 209907_s_at AACCAAACCCCATAGTACAGTGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1727 209907_s_at TACAGTGCCTTGTCCTAGTGTTCAC SEQ ID NO: 1728 209907_s_at AGTGTTCACATGTTCAGCTCTGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1729 209907_s_at GATGCCAAGGTTTCCATTTTCAGGG SEQ ID NO: 1730 209907_s_at TTACCGCTCGGTTGAATGTGTCCAC SEQ ID NO: 1731 209907_s_at TTGGTGACGCTGTAACCATTCCACG SEQ ID NO: 1732 209907_s_at CACTTGGCGCGGCCTGATACTGAAA SEQ ID NO: 1733 209907_s_at TAGCGTCTACTCGTGCACTGAATAA SEQ ID NO: 1734 209907_s_at AGATTTTATCACTCTCTGCTAAGAC SEQ ID NO: 1735 209907_s_at AAGCTTTATCATTGCCCATATGTAC SEQ ID NO: 1736 209911_x_at CGTCAACGACATCTTCGAGCGCATC SEQ ID NO: 1737 209911_x_at CCCGCCTGGCGCATTACAACAAGCG SEQ ID NO: 1738 209911_x_at GCATTACAACAAGCGCTCGACCATC SEQ ID NO: 1739 209911_x_at TCGACCATCACCTCCAGGGAGATCC SEQ ID NO: 1740 209911_x_at TCACCAAGTACACCAGTTCCAAGTA SEQ ID NO: 1741 209911_x_at GAACTTAGGAAGTCTCATCTGCCTG SEQ ID NO: 1742 209911_x_at TGACTGTGTGGATCCCACCCAAATC SEQ ID NO: 1743 209911_x_at AAATCCAACTCATCCTGGTTTGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1744 209911_x_at AGGTGTTTGCACTTCATGTTACTTT SEQ ID NO: 1745 209911_x_at ATTTACTTCTGTTACAGACCTAGTT SEQ ID NO: 1746 209911_x_at TACTTGCCATGGACTACCTTTGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1747 209994_s_at GAAAAGGTTGTCCAAGAAGCCCTGG SEQ ID NO: 1748 209994_s_at GAAGCCCTGGACAAAGCCAGAGAAG SEQ ID NO: 1749 209994_s_at ACAAAGCCAGAGAAGGCCGCACCTG SEQ ID NO: 1750 209994_s_at CACCTGCATTGTGATTGCTCACCGC SEQ ID NO: 1751 209994_s_at CACCATCCAGAATGCAGACTTAATA SEQ ID NO: 1752 209994_s_at GCAGACTTAATAGTGGTGTTTCAGA SEQ ID NO: 1753 209994_s_at AGAGTCAAGGAGCATGGCACGCATC SEQ ID NO: 1754 209994_s_at GTCAAGGAGCATGGCACGCATCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1755 209994_s_at TCAAGGAGCATGGCACGCATCAGCA SEQ ID NO: 1756 209994_s_at ATCTATTTTTCAATGGTCAGTGTCC SEQ ID NO: 1757 209994_s_at TTTTTCAATGGTCAGTGTCCAGGCT SEQ ID NO: 1758 210664_s_at GCCAGATTTCTGCTTTTTGGAAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1759 210664_s_at AAGATCCTGGAATATGTCGAGGTTA SEQ ID NO: 1760 210664_s_at GTCGAGGTTATATTACCAGGTATTT SEQ ID NO: 1761 210664_s_at GAACGTTTCAAGTATGGTGGATGCC SEQ ID NO: 1762 210664_s_at CAAGTATGGTGGATGCCTGGGCAAT SEQ ID NO: 1763 210664_s_at GATGCCTGGGCAATATGAACAATTT SEQ ID NO: 1764 210664_s_at GAGACACTGGAAGAATGCAAGAACA SEQ ID NO: 1765 210664_s_at GATGGTCCGAATGGTTTCCAGGTGG SEQ ID NO: 1766 210664_s_at AATTATGGAACCCAGCTCAATGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1767 210664_s_at AATGCTGTGAATAACTCCCTGACTC SEQ ID NO: 1768 210664_s_at CCTGACTCCGCAATCAACCAAGGTT SEQ ID NO: 1769 210665_at GATTGGATAGCATTTCATGCCTATG SEQ ID NO: 1770 210665_at CATGCCTATGTTAATATTTGTGCTT SEQ ID NO: 1771 210665_at TTATATGTATACGTGATGCCTTTGT SEQ ID NO: 1772 210665_at GTGATGCCTTTGTAGCATACTGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1773 210665_at AAATGATGGTTGGAAGAATGCGGCT SEQ ID NO: 1774 210665_at GAATGCGGCTCATATTTACCAAGTC SEQ ID NO: 1775 210665_at GCGGCTCATATTTACCAAGTCTTTC SEQ ID NO: 1776 210665_at TTACCAAGTCTTTCTGAACGCCTTC SEQ ID NO: 1777 210665_at GCCTTCTGCATTCATGCATCCATGT SEQ ID NO: 1778 210665_at TCATGCATCCATGTTCTTTCTAGGA SEQ ID NO: 1779 210665_at CATGTTCTTTCTAGGATTGGATAGC SEQ ID NO: 1780 210942_s_at TCAGAAACCTAAACACCCAACAACA SEQ ID NO: 1781 210942_s_at ACAGGAATTATTGCCATCACATTGG SEQ ID NO: 1782 210942_s_at ATGTCACGAAGTTCACCTAGCTGGT SEQ ID NO: 1783 210942_s_at TTAAATACAACTTTTCTGACCTCAA SEQ ID NO: 1784 210942_s_at TGACCTCAAGAGTCCTTTGCACTAC SEQ ID NO: 1785 210942_s_at GCAGAGCAGCTCTTTTTGAAGGACA SEQ ID NO: 1786 210942_s_at AAAACCTCGTAATCAACTTGACTCA SEQ ID NO: 1787 210942_s_at GACTCAAGATTGACTCTACAGACTC SEQ ID NO: 1788 210942_s_at ATATGTTGGATGCACTCGTCAAATA SEQ ID NO: 1789 210942_s_at GATTCATAACCACCAGCTTAATTTC SEQ ID NO: 1790 210942_s_at GAAACCAGCCTTAAACCTGATTTAT SEQ ID NO: 1791 212176_at CAAAGTTGAAAGTGTCCTTTCTCTC SEQ ID NO: 1792 212176_at CTCCCCGTCGTAAACGCTGAGGAAT SEQ ID NO: 1793 212176_at GGCAAGAATGCCATGATGTTCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1794 212176_at GAGTTTTAAGGGCTTGTCTCATTAT SEQ ID NO: 1795 212176_at GGGCTTGTCTCATTATAGAGGCACA SEQ ID NO: 1796 212176_at GGCACATTGTGGCTGTGTAGGTGAA SEQ ID NO: 1797 212176_at ATAGGTGTACTTTTTCCAATGCTGC SEQ ID NO: 1798 212176_at TCCAATGCTGCTCCAAGTTACTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1799 212176_at ATAAACATGCCATTCTCTTTCAGCT SEQ ID NO: 1800 212176_at TCTTTCAGCTGTAATGTTCTTAAAA SEQ ID NO: 1801 212176_at TTATTCTTGAATGTACTGTGATGTC SEQ ID NO: 1802 212179_at AGTATGCCTTCTTACCAGCAATAGT SEQ ID NO: 1803 212179_at ATCATGCCAGATTTTTGCCAAGATC SEQ ID NO: 1804 212179_at CCAAGATCAGTGTTTCCTCAACATG SEQ ID NO: 1805 212179_at GTATAGTGTGCTCTTGTACCTCTAC SEQ ID NO: 1806 212179_at GTGCTCTTGTACCTCTACATAGATT SEQ ID NO: 1807 212179_at AGCAGTTACACATTTATCTAAAGGA SEQ ID NO: 1808 212179_at AATGCATGTTTACCAAAATGGCTGT SEQ ID NO: 1809 212179_at TTAGACATCGATCACATCTGGAGAC SEQ ID NO: 1810 212179_at GTAGGCGAGCTAACACAGTGTACCT SEQ ID NO: 1811 212179_at ACACAGTGTACCTAATTGCAGAATT SEQ ID NO: 1812 212179_at AGTTGTATAACATTTTCATATCTTA SEQ ID NO: 1813 212314_at TATTTTGGTACCTGTGCTTGCCACA SEQ ID NO: 1814 212314_at TTGATAGATTTCTCTTTGACTTCCA SEQ ID NO: 1815 212314_at TTGACTTCCAAGACCTAGCAGTTAT SEQ ID NO: 1816 212314_at GTCCTAGTGCTTCCGAATCATTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1817 212314_at AATGGCATTGTCGGATATCTTTTAC SEQ ID NO: 1818 212314_at ATCTTTTACATTTCAATTGCAATCC SEQ ID NO: 1819 212314_at AGTACTTAACTGTAGTCTTCTCCAT SEQ ID NO: 1820 212314_at GTAGTCTTCTCCATGAATTACACGT SEQ ID NO: 1821 212314_at GCCTCTAGCTTATAGTTTCATCCCT SEQ ID NO: 1822 212314_at GCCTGCGTGAGTCTGTACAGGGATA SEQ ID NO: 1823 212314_at GGTCCAAACTACTCTTTGCACTACT SEQ ID NO: 1824 212764_at GATGCAATTGGTTCTCCTGCATTGA SEQ ID NO: 1825 212764_at GTTAACATTTATACTTGCCTTGGAC SEQ ID NO: 1826 212764_at TACTTGCCTTGGACTGTAGAACAGA SEQ ID NO: 1827 212764_at TACAATCAAGTCATTTTACCTTTAC SEQ ID NO: 1828 212764_at ATAGCATGATGCTCTGCAGTTTTAT SEQ ID NO: 1829 212764_at TAACCATACAACTCTCATTTCCTTA SEQ ID NO: 1830 212764_at AACTCTCATTTCCTTAGTAAGCCAA SEQ ID NO: 1831 212764_at AATGTTTAACATTTTGTGCCAATTT SEQ ID NO: 1832 212764_at GCCAATTTGTTCCTGTATTCATGTA SEQ ID NO: 1833 212764_at GTTACAGATCTGACTCTTCATTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1834 212764_at AGTTCCTTGTTACATCATGGTCATT SEQ ID NO: 1835 212958_x_at AATTTCCACAGATACTTCCCTTAGA SEQ ID NO: 1836 212958_x_at TGAGCGAGGCCTTGTCAATTTTAAG SEQ ID NO: 1837 212958_x_at TAGGAAGGACCACAACATGACCCGT SEQ ID NO: 1838 212958_x_at TACACACTTTATTTACTTCGTTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1839 212958_x_at GTTGGCTTCTGTTTCTAGTTGAGGA SEQ ID NO: 1840 212958_x_at TCCTCTTTTTCCATCATAATTCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1841 212958_x_at GATTTGCCCATTTACACTTTTGAGA SEQ ID NO: 1842 212958_x_at GTAAATAACCCCATTCTTTGCTTGA SEQ ID NO: 1843 212958_x_at GTATTTTCCCAATAGCACTTTCATT SEQ ID NO: 1844 212958_x_at ATTGCCAGTGTCTTTCTTTGGTGCC SEQ ID NO: 1845 212958_x_at TTCAGCATTCTTAGCCTGTGGCAAT SEQ ID NO: 1846 213056_at AACAACGACAAAAAGCTCCAAGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1847 213056_at AAAGCTCCAAGCTGCAGTGGATTTA SEQ ID NO: 1848 213056_at GGCTAAAACTACCTCATACTTTCCT SEQ ID NO: 1849 213056_at ACTACCTCATACTTTCCTTGGAAGA SEQ ID NO: 1850 213056_at AAAGCAAATGATTTCCATATTCCTG SEQ ID NO: 1851 213056_at ATTTCCATATTCCTGATTGATCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1852 213056_at ACAAGTTTCTTGTTCATATTGTGAA SEQ ID NO: 1853 213056_at GATTTGTTAAACTGGTCCTTAGTCA SEQ ID NO: 1854 213056_at AACTGGTCCTTAGTCATTTGTATAA SEQ ID NO: 1855 213056_at ATTTGTATAGCCTTCTAGAATCAGA SEQ ID NO: 1856 213056_at GAAATAACCTTTTTGCATATTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1857 213355_at TAAGCTAGTTTTCTGAGGTGTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 1858 213355_at GTGTTTTCACACGTCTTTTTATAGT SEQ ID NO: 1859 213355_at TTATAGTTACTTCATCTTAGATTTT SEQ ID NO: 1860 213355_at AAGGGATATGACTTCCTACTAAGGA SEQ ID NO: 1861 213355_at GTTTACCACAACAATTCTGACTACA SEQ ID NO: 1862 213355_at TTGAGGAGGATATTTGGCTACTGTA SEQ ID NO: 1863 213355_at GGCTACTGTAAACATGGCTGGTGGA SEQ ID NO: 1864 213355_at GGCAAGCCGAAACCACTTGGCTCTG SEQ ID NO: 1865 213355_at GGCTCTGGAAATCTAAGTTCATACT SEQ ID NO: 1866 213355_at TGGTTTAATTAAGCTCTCTCCTGAC SEQ ID NO: 1867 213355_at TGACAACCCCCAGAATTAAATGAAC SEQ ID NO: 1868 213541_s_at CTCGAGGGTTCATGCAGTCAGTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1869 213541_s_at GTCAGTGTTATACCAAACCCAGTGT SEQ ID NO: 1870 213541_s_at AAAAATGCGCATCTCTTTCTTTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1871 213541_s_at TTCAGGACCTCATCATTATGTGGGG SEQ ID NO: 1872 213541_s_at CAGGTAAGAGATGGCCTTCTTGGCT SEQ ID NO: 1873 213541_s_at GGCTGCCACAATCAGAAATCACGCA SEQ ID NO: 1874 213541_s_at GCATTTTGGGTAGGCGGCCTCCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1875 213541_s_at CCAGTTTTCCTTTGAGTCGCGAACG SEQ ID NO: 1876 213541_s_at GTCGCGAACGCTGTGCGTTTGTCAG SEQ ID NO: 1877 213541_s_at ACTACGAGTTGATCTCGGCCAGCCA SEQ ID NO: 1878 213541_s_at TCGGCCAGCCAAAGACACACGACAA SEQ ID NO: 1879 213714_at GTTCTACTCCATACAGTTCACACTG SEQ ID NO: 1880 213714_at GATTGTGACACATTCTTAGTAGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1881 213714_at GCTAGTGTCTGTTCTAGTCACTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1882 213714_at AGTCACTGCACTGGAGTCTACGAGC SEQ ID NO: 1883 213714_at GAGTCTACGAGCCGGAACTCGCTAT SEQ ID NO: 1884 213714_at CGGAACTCGCTATATGCACGTGTGT SEQ ID NO: 1885 213714_at ACGTGTGTGTGTCCGTATGTAAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1886 213714_at GAAAGTGTGCACCGAGTGACTGAAT SEQ ID NO: 1887 213714_at GACTGATATCGAGCATTCTGCCCAC SEQ ID NO: 1888 213714_at GCTTTAACAACCCATTGAGCAGTCA SEQ ID NO: 1889 213714_at GGGAATGTGAGTAAGCTTGCTGCCA SEQ ID NO: 1890 213750_at ACTGTCCTTTTGGGCTTCTATAAAT SEQ ID NO: 1891 213750_at ATATGTAATCGTGCCAGTCTGTTCT SEQ ID NO: 1892 213750_at CAGTCTGTTCTCTGCATGACATAAT SEQ ID NO: 1893 213750_at ATGACATAATTTTCCAGCAATAGCT SEQ ID NO: 1894 213750_at GCTGTGTGGTTTTTGTAATCCTATC SEQ ID NO: 1895 213750_at GTAATCCTATCATCTAGTCAGTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1896 213750_at GTCAGTTCAAGATCTTGCAACACTG SEQ ID NO: 1897 213750_at CAACACTGTGTGATTCTTTGCTCCG SEQ ID NO: 1898 213750_at TTGCTCCGTAGTTCAGTCTTGTTGA SEQ ID NO: 1899 213750_at GACACAGGTGTTTACTTTCCTGTTC SEQ ID NO: 1900 213750_at TTTCCTGTTCTTGCATCTAGTTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1901 214327_x_at GAATCCAGATGGCATGGTTGCTCTA SEQ ID NO: 1902 214327_x_at GGTTGCTCTATTGGACTACCGTGAG SEQ ID NO: 1903 214327_x_at CTACCGTGAGGATGGTGTGACCCCA SEQ ID NO: 1904 214327_x_at GTGACCCCATATATGATTTTCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1905 214327_x_at ATGTGGCAATTATTTTGGATCTATC SEQ ID NO: 1906 214327_x_at GACTGATGTCATCTTGAGCTCTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1907 214327_x_at TTCCCTTGTACTGTAGTTTGTTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1908 214327_x_at GAGCTCTTCATTTATTTTGACTGTG SEQ ID NO: 1909 214327_x_at TTTGGAGTGGAGGCATTGTTTTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1910 214327_x_at GTTTGTTTTGAATGGCATGTATTTG SEQ ID NO: 1911 214327_x_at TAATTCTAGGTATTTTGTTTGCTTC SEQ ID NO: 1912 214349_at GATACAACGTGTTTCCTAAAAGTAG SEQ ID NO: 1913 214349_at CTTGACTTAACTGCTTCCCTGAAGT SEQ ID NO: 1914 214349_at GACTTAACTGCTTCCCTGAAGTACC SEQ ID NO: 1915 214349_at TAACTGCTTCCCTGAAGTACCGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1916 214349_at GCTTCCCTGAAGTACCGTGAGGTTC SEQ ID NO: 1917 214349_at AGTACCGTGAGGTTCCTGATGTGCG SEQ ID NO: 1918 214349_at CCGTGAGGTTCCTGATGTGCGGGCG SEQ ID NO: 1919 214349_at TTCCTGATGTGCGGGCGGTAGACGG SEQ ID NO: 1920 214349_at ATGTGCGGGCGGTAGACGGTAGGCT SEQ ID NO: 1921 214349_at CGGGCGGTAGACGGTAGGCTTATGC SEQ ID NO: 1922 214349_at TAGACGGTAGGCTTATGCGGCACGC SEQ ID NO: 1923 215388_s_at TATTCATACGTAAAATTTTGGATTA SEQ ID NO: 1924 215388_s_at GAACCACCTCAATGCAAAGATTCTA SEQ ID NO: 1925 215388_s_at GAGGGTAACAAGCGAATAACATGTA SEQ ID NO: 1926 215388_s_at CCACCAAAATGCTTACATCCGTGTG SEQ ID NO: 1927 215388_s_at ACATCCGTGTGTAATATCCCGAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1928 215388_s_at TCCGTGTGTAATATCCCGAGAAATT SEQ ID NO: 1929 215388_s_at AACATAGCATTAAGGTGGACAGCCA SEQ ID NO: 1930 215388_s_at GCATTAAGGTGGACAGCCAAACAGA SEQ ID NO: 1931 215388_s_at GAATTTGTGTGTAAACGGGGATATC SEQ ID NO: 1932 215388_s_at TCACGTTCTCACACATTGCGAACAA SEQ ID NO: 1933 215388_s_at CACACATTGCGAACAACATGTTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1934 215779_s_at AAGCGCAAGCGCAGTCGTAAGGAGA SEQ ID NO: 1935 215779_s_at GCGCAGTCGTAAGGAGAGCTACTCC SEQ ID NO: 1936 215779_s_at GTGCTAAAACAGGTTCACCCCGATA SEQ ID NO: 1937 215779_s_at TAAAACAGGTTCACCCCGATACTGG SEQ ID NO: 1938 215779_s_at AAGCACGCAGTGTCCGAAGGTACCA SEQ ID NO: 1939 215779_s_at GTCCGAAGGTACCAAGGCTGTCACC SEQ ID NO: 1940 215779_s_at GGCTGTCACCAAGTATACAAGCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1941 215779_s_at TACAAGCTCCAAGTAAATGTGTGCT SEQ ID NO: 1942 215779_s_at TCAGCTCCTGCTCCGAAGAAGGGTT SEQ ID NO: 1943 215779_s_at CCTGCTCCGAAGAAGGGTTCCAAGA SEQ ID NO: 1944 215779_s_at GTTCCAAGAAGGCTGTGACCAAGGC SEQ ID NO: 1945 217975_at GTGATGCGTTGGAAGGTTAATCGAA SEQ ID NO: 1946 217975_at CCATCCTTACCCCTATTTAATGTAG SEQ ID NO: 1947 217975_at AACAATACCATATAGCTTGCTTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1948 217975_at CTTTGTCCATATTTCTACTTATAAC SEQ ID NO: 1949 217975_at TATTTCTACTTATAACCTGTTGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1950 217975_at TGTATCTCTTGTTATCTGCATCTCA SEQ ID NO: 1951 217975_at GTTATCTGCATCTCATTGTTTATTG SEQ ID NO: 1952 217975_at GAACCAATCTACAAGTCTCTGTCTT SEQ ID NO: 1953 217975_at AGCCTCTCGGTGGTGGGATTATGAA SEQ ID NO: 1954 217975_at TTATGAATGATTTTTCTCCTTTTGC SEQ ID NO: 1955 217975_at TTCTCCTTTTGCTTGTTAGTATTTT SEQ ID NO: 1956 218280_x_at CCTTCAGTTCCCGGTAGGGCGAGTG SEQ ID NO: 1957 218280_x_at GCATCGCTTGCTGCGCAAAGGCAAC SEQ ID NO: 1958 218280_x_at TCCTCGAGTATCTGACCGCCGAGAT SEQ ID NO: 1959 218280_x_at CGCCGAGATCCTGGAGCTGGCGGGC SEQ ID NO: 1960 218280_x_at CAGGCAGGAGTTTCTCTCGGTGACT SEQ ID NO: 1961 218280_x_at AAGCTGCTGGGCAAAGTCACCATCG SEQ ID NO: 1962 218280_x_at TCTTGCCTAACATCCAGGCCGTACT SEQ ID NO: 1963 218280_x_at AAAGGGCAAGTGAGGCTGACGTCCG SEQ ID NO: 1964 218280_x_at GCGTCTCGAAGGGGCACCTGTGAAC SEQ ID NO: 1965 218280_x_at TACTATCGCTGTCATGTCTGGTCGT SEQ ID NO: 1966 218280_x_at GCAAGCAAGGAGGCAAGGCCCGCGC SEQ ID NO: 1967 218332_at CCCTCCCTTTGGATGCTGGTGAATA SEQ ID NO: 1968 218332_at TTGGATGCTGGTGAATACTGTGTGC SEQ ID NO: 1969 218332_at GATGGGATATGATGCATAGGCTTGG SEQ ID NO: 1970 218332_at TGATGGTTTCCCTAAAGTTATTACG SEQ ID NO: 1971 218332_at GACCCCTGCTTTCGAATTTACATGT SEQ ID NO: 1972 218332_at ATGTTCATGATGTGCCCTTGTTGTA SEQ ID NO: 1973 218332_at ATGATGTGCCCTTGTTGTAAACCTT SEQ ID NO: 1974 218332_at TGTAAACCTTTACCTGTCACTTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1975 218332_at CTGTCACTTGTTTACGTGGGTCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1976 218332_at CACTTGTTTACGTGGGTCTCCTATT SEQ ID NO: 1977 218332_at ATTGTGTTTTTGAACCAGTCTGTAA SEQ ID NO: 1978 218627_at TAATCATTTCTGGGTTCACTGCGAC SEQ ID NO: 1979 218627_at CACTGCGACTCACTGTAGTGCTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1980 218627_at ATCCCCCTTGTAACACTGGAACTGA SEQ ID NO: 1981 218627_at GAGGAGAAATGCCACATACCTTTCC SEQ ID NO: 1982 218627_at ATACCTTTCCCATGGGACCTGTGGT SEQ ID NO: 1983 218627_at CGAGCAGACTTTTGTTCTCGGCGCT SEQ ID NO: 1984 218627_at GGCGCTCCTCACGATGGAGTTTCAT SEQ ID NO: 1985 218627_at GTTTCATGCTTCATTTTCACATCTC SEQ ID NO: 1986 218627_at GAGTACGTGCCTTAATCTTTATCTT SEQ ID NO: 1987 218627_at ATGAACAGAGTGCCTCCTGGTACAC SEQ ID NO: 1988 218627_at AGAATGGGATTTACTCTGCTTTACC SEQ ID NO: 1989 218764_at CACCAAGACGACTGCTTCAGCTTCT SEQ ID NO: 1990 218764_at TCTCTTATCCTTACTTTCTTTAATA SEQ ID NO: 1991 218764_at AAAGGTGCCACAATGCCCAGTATTG SEQ ID NO: 1992 218764_at AGCTTTCATTCATTCTGGAGTCTAC SEQ ID NO: 1993 218764_at ATTCTGTGAAATGCCTCTCCACGTT SEQ ID NO: 1994 218764_at TCTCCACGTTGCATATGTCACACTT SEQ ID NO: 1995 218764_at GTCTGCACATAACTCTTTTTTCACA SEQ ID NO: 1996 218764_at GCCACAACAGCACAGTCAGCGGGTG SEQ ID NO: 1997 218764_at GTCAGCGGGTGAATTACAGGTGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1998 218764_at GTAATCTGATCTTGTCTGTATCGCC SEQ ID NO: 1999 218764_at AGAATTGCAGGCCACTCATGTCAGT SEQ ID NO: 2000 218772_x_at TTTCCATAGCAGGTATTTTCTACTA SEQ ID NO: 2001 218772_x_at TCTGAAGTCTTTTTCATGCCCTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2002 218772_x_at AGCTTGACTTATTTTTTTCTCTCTC SEQ ID NO: 2003 218772_x_at GGAGAAATTTTCTCAGCATTTTGCA SEQ ID NO: 2004 218772_x_at GCATTTTGCATGTTCTTTCTAATCT SEQ ID NO: 2005 218772_x_at GTTCTTTCTAATCTTTGTTGGTCTG SEQ ID NO: 2006 218772_x_at TCAAAAATTTTTCCACTATGTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 2007 218772_x_at TATGTCTTTTTTCTAGTGGCTACTG SEQ ID NO: 2008 218772_x_at GTGGCTACTGTTTTAGTTTTCTAGT SEQ ID NO: 2009 218772_x_at ATCTCTGACAAGCTTTCGTATGGTT SEQ ID NO: 2010 218772_x_at GGTTTTGTTATATCTTCATCTACAT SEQ ID NO: 2011 218901_at TATATTCATCTTTTCAGGGTAAATT SEQ ID NO: 2012 218901_at GAGTTTCTCGTAATGCTCATTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 2013 218901_at CTCATTTTTACATGCTGCTACTAGC SEQ ID NO: 2014 218901_at GTGCCATTGCAATCGTAAGTAGACT SEQ ID NO: 2015 218901_at GTAGACTATGTATTTCCTATAATGA SEQ ID NO: 2016 218901_at TTTAACTTGCCTAGATCCCTGTATT SEQ ID NO: 2017 218901_at TAGATCCCTGTATTCCAAAACCTGC SEQ ID NO: 2018 218901_at TGTATTCCAAAACCTGCTGCATCAT SEQ ID NO: 2019 218901_at CATGATTTCTATGTTTCTTAATGAT SEQ ID NO: 2020 218901_at GGAATTTGTGCGTTCATGCTTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 2021 218901_at GTTCATGCTTTTTCGTATTCTTTAT SEQ ID NO: 2022 218971_s_at CATGCTGACATGTTCTGCCACAGGC SEQ ID NO: 2023 218971_s_at GCGTCATCTACAAGCTGGGTGGCGA SEQ ID NO: 2024 218971_s_at ACTGGAGCACTGCCATGGACTGTGG SEQ ID NO: 2025 218971_s_at AAGGGCCACCCGAGGAAGCAGTATT SEQ ID NO: 2026 218971_s_at AGGACAGGAAAACCACGTGCTCCAC SEQ ID NO: 2027 218971_s_at TGGCAAGGAGGCTCAGGTGCTTCCA SEQ ID NO: 2028 218971_s_at GTGCTTCCATCTGTGGTGACTGGAA SEQ ID NO: 2029 218971_s_at GGAATGGGACCCACGTGGAGTAGGT SEQ ID NO: 2030 218971_s_at GAGTAGGTGACATATGCTTCCCAGA SEQ ID NO: 2031 218971_s_at GTGGCTGTGCCAGGAGTACATGTGA SEQ ID NO: 2032 218971_s_at ATATATGTGCCCATTTATCTTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 2033 219054_at GACAACAATGAAGTAGCCCCTGAAC SEQ ID NO: 2034 219054_at GTAGCCCCTGAACAGCATGGAGTTG SEQ ID NO: 2035 219054_at GAGTTGCTGTGAGTTTGTTCGTTGC SEQ ID NO: 2036 219054_at GTTCGTTGCAGACCTTTGTGTTGGG SEQ ID NO: 2037 219054_at GGTCCTGGGAATCTGAGCTTTGTTC SEQ ID NO: 2038 219054_at CTTTGTTCCCTGTGCATGGTGGATA SEQ ID NO: 2039 219054_at GGGATAGACCTTGTGACAGACCAAT SEQ ID NO: 2040 219054_at GACAGACCAATTCTGTGACCCCTGT SEQ ID NO: 2041 219054_at TGACCCCTGTCTTCTGGGTCACATT SEQ ID NO: 2042 219054_at AAATGTGTATGTGTCCTTGTAAATG SEQ ID NO: 2043 219054_at GCAAGAATGCCACGTACTCAGAGTA SEQ ID NO: 2044 219559_at TGTCCTGCACACTGTAGGATGCTTA SEQ ID NO: 2045 219559_at GATGCTTAAAGGTATCCCTGGCCTC SEQ ID NO: 2046 219559_at CCCAGTCAGACATGACCTCAGAGTC SEQ ID NO: 2047 219559_at CTCAGAGTCTCTGTGTCTCCTAGAA SEQ ID NO: 2048 219559_at CTCCTAGAAGCCTGACAGAGACCCC SEQ ID NO: 2049 219559_at TGGGTGGGTGGCGGGCTAGAGACCC SEQ ID NO: 2050 219559_at CCCTCCGCACTAACAGTGTTCTCAG SEQ ID NO: 2051 219559_at GCCTGGTGATTCTGCTCTCCAGGGA SEQ ID NO: 2052 219559_at CTCCCTTTTCGTTGCCTGAGGAGCT SEQ ID NO: 2053 219559_at GGAGCTGGTGGTTTCATGAGTTAAT SEQ ID NO: 2054 219559_at GTGGAAAAGCACGCCAAAGCCTTAT SEQ ID NO: 2055 219648_at ATGCTGTGAATGCAGCTTGCTTCTC SEQ ID NO: 2056 219648_at GTCCAGCTTCAAAAGTTACTTGCCA SEQ ID NO: 2057 219648_at AGATTTTGCACTTCTGAATTCAGGT SEQ ID NO: 2058 219648_at TCTGCTTAGAGGACTGTGACTTGAA SEQ ID NO: 2059 219648_at TGAGCTTTTTGGTAGCGTCCACAAT SEQ ID NO: 2060 219648_at ATAGGCGAGATCCGTGTTCTCCATT SEQ ID NO: 2061 219648_at TGTAGACCAATTTAACTGCTGTGTT SEQ ID NO: 2062 219648_at TTAGTGCTTAATCTTTGCCTCATGT SEQ ID NO: 2063 219648_at TTCTCTCAATTCTGTAGACTCTCGC SEQ ID NO: 2064 219648_at GCACTGAAGATCTTTGCTGGACCTT SEQ ID NO: 2065 219648_at CTGGACCTTCTTCTCTTCAGAAGAT SEQ ID NO: 2066 220122_at CACCTGTGCTCTGATTAAATCTACA SEQ ID NO: 2067 220122_at AGTAATCCATTACACTTTTCTATGT SEQ ID NO: 2068 220122_at ATTCTGGCTTTAGATCCCGACATTC SEQ ID NO: 2069 220122_at CCGACATTCACTCCTGTGCAAATTA SEQ ID NO: 2070 220122_at GTACATTCACTCCCTCAAGAGAATC SEQ ID NO: 2071 220122_at ATTTCAATCAATCATTCCATCTAAA SEQ ID NO: 2072 220122_at AAATCTCTACAGGACTACATAACAT SEQ ID NO: 2073 220122_at AAACGATTGCCTATCTGAATTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 2074 220122_at TGAATTTTTATACCTACCACTACTT SEQ ID NO: 2075 220122_at GGAAACTATATCCATATCGCTTTTG SEQ ID NO: 2076 220122_at ATCGCTTTTGGTGTCAGATTGTATC SEQ ID NO: 2077 221458_at GGCATGGCTTGGGTATCTCAATTCC SEQ ID NO: 2078 221458_at TCTCAATTCCCTTATAAATCCACTG SEQ ID NO: 2079 221458_at TGCATCATCAAGCACGACCACATTG SEQ ID NO: 2080 221458_at ACATTGTTTCCACCATTTACTCAAC SEQ ID NO: 2081 221458_at ATCCCACTGGCATTGATTTTGATCC SEQ ID NO: 2082 221458_at GGAGGTGAATGGCCAAGTCCTTTTG SEQ ID NO: 2083 221458_at ATCAGTTTCCACATCCTATGTACTA SEQ ID NO: 2084 221458_at AAAGTCTTTATCTGACCCATCAACA SEQ ID NO: 2085 221458_at AGAGAACGGAAAGCAGCCACTACCC SEQ ID NO: 2086 221458_at GCAGCCACTACCCTGGGATTAATCT SEQ ID NO: 2087 221458_at TAATATGTTGGCTTCCTTTTTTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2088 221773_at GAACACATCCAAAATGCATGATTCT SEQ ID NO: 2089 221773_at TATAGATCTGATTCTTTCTTTTCCT SEQ ID NO: 2090 221773_at AACTGGGATTAATGTATGCTCTAGA SEQ ID NO: 2091 221773_at TGTATGCTCTAGATCCATTTATTAG SEQ ID NO: 2092 221773_at ATAACTCACTCATATAGCTCTGCCT SEQ ID NO: 2093 221773_at ATGTCTGCTTAATCAGTGTTAAACT SEQ ID NO: 2094 221773_at ATAACCTGAATGTTGGTCTCTTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2095 221773_at TGGTCTCTTTGTACACATCTTTTCT SEQ ID NO: 2096 221773_at CACATCTTTTCTATGACTGCAAATC SEQ ID NO: 2097 221773_at GACTGCAAATCTTCACTTTATGTAT SEQ ID NO: 2098 221773_at CTTTATGTATCATTTTTACTGTCAT SEQ ID NO: 2099 221833_at AAGCACCAGGGCACGGACAGGAATA SEQ ID NO: 2100 221833_at GTACTGAATTAGCCACTTTCTCCAT SEQ ID NO: 2101 221833_at CTTTCTCCATAGCCAAGTTGCGAAT SEQ ID NO: 2102 221833_at GGCCCCGGCAAGTTGGACAACATGT SEQ ID NO: 2103 221833_at GAGCTTTGGGCGACAGTTGCTACAA SEQ ID NO: 2104 221833_at AACAAGATGGCCACTCTGACATTGA SEQ ID NO: 2105 221833_at GACTGGACACTCAAAAAGACTCGCC SEQ ID NO: 2106 221833_at ATTGTTGGATGCAGTTGTGCCAGTC SEQ ID NO: 2107 221833_at TGGACACTTCGAGGTACCGGTAGGT SEQ ID NO: 2108 221833_at AGCAGTCTGACGGCTCATTTCTGAA SEQ ID NO: 2109 221833_at GTTTACATGCCATAAGTCCTTTTAA SEQ ID NO: 2110 221942_s_at TTTTGCTGGCGTCGTTGGAGTTAAA SEQ ID NO: 2111 221942_s_at TGGAGTTAAAATGCCCCGTTACTGT SEQ ID NO: 2112 221942_s_at AAACAATGTCACTCTGGCTAACAAA SEQ ID NO: 2113 221942_s_at ACTCAAAGACTGTCCTGGTTTCGTG SEQ ID NO: 2114 221942_s_at TCGTGTTTACCCCTCGATCAAGGGA SEQ ID NO: 2115 221942_s_at TTCCACCAAACTTCCCTAGTGAAAT SEQ ID NO: 2116 221942_s_at AGTGAAATCCCCGGAATCTGCCATT SEQ ID NO: 2117 221942_s_at AACAAACTCAAAACCATGCTTCCAA SEQ ID NO: 2118 221942_s_at GTCACAATCTTTCTCCTGTTTAACA SEQ ID NO: 2119 221942_s_at CTGATGAAGTTATGTCTCCCCATGG SEQ ID NO: 2120 221942_s_at CTCCCCATGGAGAACCTATCAAGAT SEQ ID NO: 2121 222067_x_at CCGGCATCTCTTCCAAGGCAATGGG SEQ ID NO: 2122 222067_x_at GGATCATGAATTCCTTCGTCAACGA SEQ ID NO: 2123 222067_x_at CGTCAACGACATCTTCGAGCGCATC SEQ ID NO: 2124 222067_x_at ATTAACGCTACGATGCCTGAACCTA SEQ ID NO: 2125 222067_x_at GCATTACAACAAGCGCTCGACCATC SEQ ID NO: 2126 222067_x_at TCGACCATCACCTCCAGGGAGATCC SEQ ID NO: 2127 222067_x_at GTAAGCATCTTTACACCTAATCCCA SEQ ID NO: 2128 222067_x_at TACACCTAATCCCAAAGGCTCTTTT SEQ ID NO: 2129 222067_x_at TAAGAGCCACGCATGTTTTCAATAA SEQ ID NO: 2130 222067_x_at GCTCCTGCCCCAAAGAAGGGCTCCA SEQ ID NO: 2131 222067_x_at AGGGCTCCAAGAAGGCGGTGACTAA SEQ ID NO: 2132 222315_at GGCCTGCAGTGGATAGAGCCTAGCA SEQ ID NO: 2133 222315_at ATCTCTGACAGTGATTTCCAGCGAC SEQ ID NO: 2134 222315_at CCAGCGACTTTGTCAACACGGTCCG SEQ ID NO: 2135 222315_at TCCGCCCCCAGCAAGTATAAGAGGA SEQ ID NO: 2136 222315_at ACAAATGTCTTTACTGCCTTGTCTT SEQ ID NO: 2137 222315_at CCCTTGCCACTTGTCATTATTCAAG SEQ ID NO: 2138 222315_at TTACCAGCTGTGCTTGCGTTGCAAG SEQ ID NO: 2139 222315_at CTTGCGTTGCAAGACCTGTCACAGT SEQ ID NO: 2140 222315_at CTGCACCATTCAAACTAGCCAACCC SEQ ID NO: 2141 222315_at TCTTCGGGGCTCATGCTAGGCCCGA SEQ ID NO: 2142 222315_at GCTAGGCCCGAGTGCATTCAATAAA SEQ ID NO: 2143 222735_at GAACTTCATATGGCAGTCCATTTAG SEQ ID NO: 2144 222735_at TAAAATCTGGTTCCTTCTTAGCAAA SEQ ID NO: 2145 222735_at AAAACTCTGTGACATAGTTTCTTTT SEQ ID NO: 2146 222735_at TACTCCCCGTATCAGGTATTTTCGA SEQ ID NO: 2147 222735_at AAGTACTCAAGTCACATCACATTCA SEQ ID NO: 2148 222735_at AAACACCAGCAGATACTATTACTTG SEQ ID NO: 2149 222735_at ATTGGGAGGGGGCACTTTTCATAGT SEQ ID NO: 2150 222735_at GGCACTTTTCATAGTCTTGGAATGC SEQ ID NO: 2151 222735_at TATTATATTTGATACTCTTACAGTT SEQ ID NO: 2152 222735_at AATTATTGACCAGTTTTGAAGTTTG SEQ ID NO: 2153 222735_at GAAGGACTCTTGTTTTACACTTGTA SEQ ID NO: 2154 222815_at TGATCTTTAAATTTTCCCACACCAT SEQ ID NO: 2155 222815_at AAATTTTCCCACACCATAAGAGAGG SEQ ID NO: 2156 222815_at AAAGCTATATCATTCCCAGTTATTA SEQ ID NO: 2157 222815_at GTTAACACAAATTCAGCCACATTCT SEQ ID NO: 2158 222815_at GAGTATTGTTTGTTCACCTTTCAGA SEQ ID NO: 2159 222815_at TGTTTGTTCACCTTTCAGACTTGGT SEQ ID NO: 2160 222815_at GACTTGGTGATACTGGACATGTCAG SEQ ID NO: 2161 222815_at AGGATCTTCTAAGTGTATAACTGTC SEQ ID NO: 2162 222815_at GCCCATCACTGTGGCACACTGTAGA SEQ ID NO: 2163 222815_at AAAGCCTATGCTTGTGTAAGTGAAA SEQ ID NO: 2164 222815_at TAGAGGCTCAGTACTTTTCCAATGC SEQ ID NO: 2165 225629_s_at GCTCTATACGTAGTGAGGACCCAGA SEQ ID NO: 2166 225629_s_at GTGAGGACCCAGATTTAGAGAAACT SEQ ID NO: 2167 225629_s_at ATTTATCTCCGCATTTGTGTGTGTG SEQ ID NO: 2168 225629_s_at AACTCTGTAGGCCAATAAACCAACA SEQ ID NO: 2169 225629_s_at AAATAGCTTCCAGAATGTGGTGGTT SEQ ID NO: 2170 225629_s_at GAATGTGGTGGTTCTGGGCAACAAA SEQ ID NO: 2171 225629_s_at GAGATTGTGGCGACGTGGAGATTAA SEQ ID NO: 2172 225629_s_at TGATCAAGTCTTGTCAGTTCGTGCC SEQ ID NO: 2173 225629_s_at TCTTTCCCCATGTTCCCTGGGAAGA SEQ ID NO: 2174 225629_s_at GTTCTGTGCCGCAGCACGCAAAATT SEQ ID NO: 2175 225629_s_at GAATTCTACAGACTAGCTCTATACG SEQ ID NO: 2176 226545_at CATGTGTCTCTGTAATAGGGATAAT SEQ ID NO: 2177 226545_at TCTATCTTATGTTGTCTTGAGGCCA SEQ ID NO: 2178 226545_at GAGGCCAAGATTTACCACGTTTGCC SEQ ID NO: 2179 226545_at TTACCACGTTTGCCCAGTGTATTGA SEQ ID NO: 2180 226545_at GGTAGAAGGTAGTTCCATGTTCCAT SEQ ID NO: 2181 226545_at TCCATGTTCCATTTGTAGATCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 2182 226545_at AGAATGTGGCTCAGTTCTGGTCCTT SEQ ID NO: 2183 226545_at GGTCCTTCAAGCCTGTATGGTTTGG SEQ ID NO: 2184 226545_at TTGGATTTTCAGTAGGGGACAGTTG SEQ ID NO: 2185 226545_at GGAGTCAATCTCTTTGGTACACAGG SEQ ID NO: 2186 226545_at TTCATTCACGAATCTCTTATTTTGG SEQ ID NO: 2187 226547_at AATATTGGTACCTGTCATTTTTTCA SEQ ID NO: 2188 226547_at TGTTAGTGACTTTGATGCCTTTTAA SEQ ID NO: 2189 226547_at AAAGAGATCTCTAGCGTGTGTGAAT SEQ ID NO: 2190 226547_at GCGTGTGTGAATAGAGCTCCAGATG SEQ ID NO: 2191 226547_at GCTCCAGATGCCTCTAAAAGCCGCA SEQ ID NO: 2192 226547_at AGCCGCATGTACAAAGGAAGCCACG SEQ ID NO: 2193 226547_at AAAGGAAGCCACGTCTATCCTGTCT SEQ ID NO: 2194 226547_at TGCTTTTCCTGTTTTGTAACCTCTT SEQ ID NO: 2195 226547_at TTGTAACCTCTTTGTACTTTGTTCA SEQ ID NO: 2196 226547_at GTACTTTGTTCATGGTGACTTGTAA SEQ ID NO: 2197 226547_at GGAAGGGGTGCCTAGATGCCTTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2198 226985_at GGCCTCTGAAGAGTCAAGGTCTGCT SEQ ID NO: 2199 226985_at TGTGTTTACCTCACTCAAGCTGACA SEQ ID NO: 2200 226985_at GGGAATCTATCCTTCTTTTAGACAC SEQ ID NO: 2201 226985_at GACACACGGTAATCCTTGGGCTGTA SEQ ID NO: 2202 226985_at GGGCTGTATTACTGAAGGCTTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 2203 226985_at AGGTGAATTCCTGGTCTTGGCAGAT SEQ ID NO: 2204 226985_at GGAGCACAGAAGTCGTGGCCTGAGG SEQ ID NO: 2205 226985_at GGCCTGAGGCTGTTCTATGGGCACT SEQ ID NO: 2206 226985_at TGGGCACTTGGGGCTAAATCGCCTC SEQ ID NO: 2207 226985_at AATCGCCTCCTGAGGGTGACTGTTG SEQ ID NO: 2208 226985_at GTGACTGTTGCTTATTCTGCTGGAC SEQ ID NO: 2209 228465_at GAAGTGGTAGGCAAGAGTCTCTGTG SEQ ID NO: 2210 228465_at GAGTCTCTGTGTTACCATGGGAACG SEQ ID NO: 2211 228465_at GAACGATTAAGTTTTCCAAGGTGCA SEQ ID NO: 2212 228465_at CCTCATTCCAGCTTCAGGGTCAATG SEQ ID NO: 2213 228465_at GGGTCAATGACTTACTAGCTCAGAG SEQ ID NO: 2214 228465_at ACATACCTACTATCTGTACAGAGTG SEQ ID NO: 2215 228465_at GAGTGACTCTCATTACCCAGAGAAC SEQ ID NO: 2216 228465_at GGGGAGTACTTAAGGTGTATGAGCA SEQ ID NO: 2217 228465_at AACAAATTGTTATCCAGGTCACTCC SEQ ID NO: 2218 228465_at TCACTCCAGAACTGTTGTATACAGA SEQ ID NO: 2219 228465_at TTGTGCCCTGAAAATTGTATCAACA SEQ ID NO: 2220 228570_at TAAACCTATTTCCTAGCATGCCTTC SEQ ID NO: 2221 228570_at GTTGTGCCAGACCCTAGATTGTGAA SEQ ID NO: 2222 228570_at CACTGTTCTTCTGTTGTACGAGCTC SEQ ID NO: 2223 228570_at CAATGTCACATCGCTTCATGGGCAT SEQ ID NO: 2224 228570_at GGCATGGCCCATGGAGCATCTGGGT SEQ ID NO: 2225 228570_at TATTGGCTCTTCTGCGAGGCTGATA SEQ ID NO: 2226 228570_at CCTCTCTTCCACATGATCATTTGCA SEQ ID NO: 2227 228570_at CTGCGTGGATGTTTCCTTAACCTCA SEQ ID NO: 2228 228570_at TGTCTAATGCTAGTTCAGGGCCTCC SEQ ID NO: 2229 228570_at GGCCTCCAGGCATTGATTTGTACAG SEQ ID NO: 2230 228570_at GGTAACTCCCAATGAGGCTTCTGTT SEQ ID NO: 2231 228857_at GGTGGGCGTGGTACTGAGAGTCCCA SEQ ID NO: 2232 228857_at GTGAGGGGAGTGCCCTCAGGCAGGC SEQ ID NO: 2233 228857_at GGAGGGAACAGCGCTGACATTCAGC SEQ ID NO: 2234 228857_at TCAGCTGGTTCGCACTGATACGGCT SEQ ID NO: 2235 228857_at GATACGGCTCAACCAGTTTGTTAAA SEQ ID NO: 2236 228857_at GGACTTCCCGCTGCATTTGAGAAGC SEQ ID NO: 2237 228857_at TTGAGAAGCTTTGCAGCGCCATCTG SEQ ID NO: 2238 228857_at TGCTTTGCGCCTTCATCTTGAAGCA SEQ ID NO: 2239 228857_at GAAGCACTCTGAAATTGCCTGTTTA SEQ ID NO: 2240 228857_at GAATCATGGAGTTGCTACTGCTTCT SEQ ID NO: 2241 228857_at AGTGCATTGTCGTTCTTGTGTCAGT SEQ ID NO: 2242 228904_at AACTGTGAGAGATGTCTGGGCCTGC SEQ ID NO: 2243 228904_at GAGATGTCTGGGCCTGCAGAAGTCC SEQ ID NO: 2244 228904_at GCAGAAGTCCAGCATTGCTCAAAAA SEQ ID NO: 2245 228904_at ATTATTTATCCCCCTACATTATGTA SEQ ID NO: 2246 228904_at AGGACATTGTGTTTCCTGTCATGTA SEQ ID NO: 2247 228904_at AAAGGCATGAACTCAGCTCCTAATC SEQ ID NO: 2248 228904_at ACTCAGCTCCTAATCGTCACTGTAT SEQ ID NO: 2249 228904_at AATCGTCACTGTATAGTCCTGAATT SEQ ID NO: 2250 228904_at TAGAGTTAATTCCCTCTTGGAACTT SEQ ID NO: 2251 228904_at TTTCTTTGTTCTTCAGTAGTTACTT SEQ ID NO: 2252 228904_at AAGGGTTGTCTGTCAAACAATTCTT SEQ ID NO: 2253 228915_at GAAAAAAGCTATCAGCTGTATGTTA SEQ ID NO: 2254 228915_at AGAGAGACTCTTACTAACATGTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2255 228915_at ATTTTATGGTTTCCATGCTTTTGTA SEQ ID NO: 2256 228915_at TCCATGCTTTTGTAATCCTAAAAAT SEQ ID NO: 2257 228915_at AAAATATTAATGTCTAGTTGTTCTA SEQ ID NO: 2258 228915_at TTATAACCACATTTGCGCTCTATGC SEQ ID NO: 2259 228915_at CACATTTGCGCTCTATGCAAGCCCT SEQ ID NO: 2260 228915_at CGCTCTATGCAAGCCCTTGGAACAG SEQ ID NO: 2261 228915_at AATTTTTCTATGGTAGCCTAGTTAT SEQ ID NO: 2262 228915_at GTAGCCTAGTTATTTGAGCCTGGTT SEQ ID NO: 2263 228915_at ATTTGAGCCTGGTTTCAATGTGAGA SEQ ID NO: 2264 229287_at GATTAAACCTATACAAGTCTGGCAA SEQ ID NO: 2265 229287_at TACAAGTCTGGCAATGAGCTCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 2266 229287_at AATGAGCTCTGCATGAGGAAATGGA SEQ ID NO: 2267 229287_at TCCTTTTCTGATCATGGGCTCTGGA SEQ ID NO: 2268 229287_at GATCATGGGCTCTGGAAAGTATTCA SEQ ID NO: 2269 229287_at GAAAGTATTCATGGCCTTTACCAGC SEQ ID NO: 2270 229287_at ACCAGCATTCAGTATAAACCAGAGA SEQ ID NO: 2271 229287_at ATATGTACTTACGTGTGTCTGTGAG SEQ ID NO: 2272 229287_at TGTGTGTCTGAGTGTTATTCTGAAC SEQ ID NO: 2273 229287_at GAGTGTTATTCTGAACAGCTTGTAA SEQ ID NO: 2274 229287_at AAGCTGAGTTCTTTTGGCAAATATA SEQ ID NO: 2275 230389_at ATATGTTTAGAGATGCCGCCAGAAC SEQ ID NO: 2276 230389_at AGCATGTTCTCCATTTGCAGTCTAC SEQ ID NO: 2277 230389_at GAAAATCCTTACCAGTTGTTTGTCA SEQ ID NO: 2278 230389_at TCTTGTTCTCTTGCTGGTTATTGGC SEQ ID NO: 2279 230389_at GCTGGTTATTGGCAGACTCAGTCTT SEQ ID NO: 2280 230389_at GATAGGGAAACCCACGTATGCCTTT SEQ ID NO: 2281 230389_at ATGCCTTTGAGGCTAGGGACTATGT SEQ ID NO: 2282 230389_at GGGACTATGTTGTAAGTTCACCTGT SEQ ID NO: 2283 230389_at GTTCACCTGTGATGGCCAGGTCATA SEQ ID NO: 2284 230389_at AGACTGGGGACCCAGAGGCACTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2285 230389_at ACTTGTTATGCTTCCACACTACGAA SEQ ID NO: 2286 230698_at ACTTGGGACGTGAGTTGTCTCTCAA SEQ ID NO: 2287 230698_at GAGTTGTCTCTCAAAGCACAGTAGT SEQ ID NO: 2288 230698_at AAGCACAGCTGGGGATTGATCATGG SEQ ID NO: 2289 230698_at GGAGCTTGGCAGCTCTCATATCCAG SEQ ID NO: 2290 230698_at GCAGCTCTCATATCCAGAATAAGCC SEQ ID NO: 2291 230698_at ATAAGCCACTAAGACGGAACTCATC SEQ ID NO: 2292 230698_at ACTAAGACGGAACTCATCAATCACC SEQ ID NO: 2293 230698_at AATTAACTTAGCATGCAACTTACCG SEQ ID NO: 2294 230698_at AACTGCCATATTTACCAGATGTTTT SEQ ID NO: 2295 230698_at CAGATGTTTTCTTTAACCGAACTTG SEQ ID NO: 2296 230698_at TTAACCGAACTTGTCTGTAAATATA SEQ ID NO: 2297 230788_at GATAGCGAATGCACTCAGGGTCAGC SEQ ID NO: 2298 230788_at ACTTATTTAAATGACAGCACCTGAG SEQ ID NO: 2299 230788_at AGAGGAACCGTTTTACACTGGATGT SEQ ID NO: 2300 230788_at TACATGTCTGTTGTTGGTCATCTCT SEQ ID NO: 2301 230788_at GTCATCTCTCCTGTGTCTTAAATAC SEQ ID NO: 2302 230788_at GAGCATAGTGTTTGGGCTAGTGGGT SEQ ID NO: 2303 230788_at GCTAGTGGGTTTCTGACAGCCCATG SEQ ID NO: 2304 230788_at ACAGCCCATGGGAATGCCCTGAAAC SEQ ID NO: 2305 230788_at GGAATGCCCTGAAACTACTGTATCT SEQ ID NO: 2306 230788_at GATGTTTGTTTTCGATGAGGTTCCA SEQ ID NO: 2307 230788_at CGATGAGGTTCCATGTTTTGTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 2308 232098_at TTGGACTAGTCCTATCATAAATGGG SEQ ID NO: 2309 232098_at GATACTGTACCATTTGCATGTGTGC SEQ ID NO: 2310 232098_at TGTGTTTGTGTCTTTCTGCAGGCAC SEQ ID NO: 2311 232098_at TGTGTCTTTCTGCAGGCACATCTCA SEQ ID NO: 2312 232098_at ATCACTTTTGTGATAGGCTCACTTT SEQ ID NO: 2313 232098_at GGCTCACTTTTGTGAATGATCTGAG SEQ ID NO: 2314 232098_at GTTTGAAAGATCTAGTTGCATACAC SEQ ID NO: 2315 232098_at TTGCATACACAGACTCTTGGATCAA SEQ ID NO: 2316 232098_at CTCTGGGCTCACTTCTTAGATCAGT SEQ ID NO: 2317 232098_at ACTTCTTAGATCAGTCTGTGGCCAA SEQ ID NO: 2318 232098_at AATTCCTGGCACATCAGTTTGTCAA SEQ ID NO: 2319 232231_at AAGACACTTCTTCCAAACCTTGAAT SEQ ID NO: 2320 232231_at GATGTGTGTTTACTTCATGTTTACA SEQ ID NO: 2321 232231_at ATCAGCCAAAACCATAACTTACAAT SEQ ID NO: 2322 232231_at TTGGATATGCTTTACCATTCTTAGG SEQ ID NO: 2323 232231_at ACCATTCTTAGGTTTCTGTGGAACA SEQ ID NO: 2324 232231_at TTTTTCCAATTGCTATTGCCCAAGA SEQ ID NO: 2325 232231_at GCTATTGCCCAAGAATTGCTTTCCA SEQ ID NO: 2326 232231_at GAATTGCTTTCCATGCACATATTGT SEQ ID NO: 2327 232231_at TTGTAAAAATTCCGCTTTGTGCCAC SEQ ID NO: 2328 232231_at GCTTTGTGCCACAGGTCATGATTGT SEQ ID NO: 2329 232231_at AGGGACTATTTGTATTGTATGTTGC SEQ ID NO: 2330 234994_at ACAATCGGCTAACCTTGACATTTCT SEQ ID NO: 2331 234994_at CATATGCCACTATCTCGGTAGTTCA SEQ ID NO: 2332 234994_at TAAATTGCCTTGAAGTTTACCTTGT SEQ ID NO: 2333 234994_at CCTTGTGCTGGAGAGCCTTATGATA SEQ ID NO: 2334 234994_at GATAACTCCAAAGACTTTCTTACGG SEQ ID NO: 2335 234994_at TAGGATTGTGTTTCTTAGTCACTGA SEQ ID NO: 2336 234994_at ATACCTAAACATTTCTGAACATCAG SEQ ID NO: 2337 234994_at TCTGAACATCAGTATTGCAGTTGTG SEQ ID NO: 2338 234994_at GGAGGATACATTTGTTTGTGTTGCT SEQ ID NO: 2339 234994_at AAAATTCCACCTTGCATTTGCATCA SEQ ID NO: 2340 234994_at CCCTCAATTGAGGCAGTTTTCTTTG SEQ ID NO: 2341 235048_at TCAGTATTTTTATTCGCCTTCTAGA SEQ ID NO: 2342 235048_at ATCCACACATCACCCATTTATATTA SEQ ID NO: 2343 235048_at GGCTTACCTTCTGTCATCAAGTGAT SEQ ID NO: 2344 235048_at GTATCATCCTGGATCGTCATTTCCA SEQ ID NO: 2345 235048_at GTCATTTCCAAGGAACTAGCCTTTC SEQ ID NO: 2346 235048_at CTTTCTTTTCCTAAGCGTCTGTATG SEQ ID NO: 2347 235048_at GTATGTGTTCTAAAACTTCCAGTAT SEQ ID NO: 2348 235048_at CTGGAGTACCTATGTTTGTTTTCTT SEQ ID NO: 2349 235048_at GATTGTTTCCTGGTCTGTGTTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 2350 235048_at TTTCCTTCAGTTTTCCTCATGAAGA SEQ ID NO: 2351 235048_at ATCACATTGGTTGTACTCTGAAGAC SEQ ID NO: 2352 235199_at GCATTTTTCCAACATTGAAGGTATT SEQ ID NO: 2353 235199_at GTCACTAAGAGATTCATTCTTTTAT SEQ ID NO: 2354 235199_at AAAAGTTTCACTCTCTTTATAGTGC SEQ ID NO: 2355 235199_at GTGCTTCAGGATACAACTTTTTCAG SEQ ID NO: 2356 235199_at GATACAACTTTTTCAGGGCCTTATT SEQ ID NO: 2357 235199_at ACTGATTCACATGTTATTCTTCTAA SEQ ID NO: 2358 235199_at AGATATGGTTCCAGGCAGACCTCCT SEQ ID NO: 2359 235199_at TTCCAGGCAGACCTCCTTAGAGACC SEQ ID NO: 2360 235199_at ATTTCATTACTGTTACTGGGTGCCA SEQ ID NO: 2361 235199_at GGGTGCCAAGTGTCTTTCATTTGGA SEQ ID NO: 2362 235199_at GGAAGTGAACTTACTCCAGTTATTG SEQ ID NO: 2363 235252_at CCAAATCAAAACACCCTCTGTCATC SEQ ID NO: 2364 235252_at GCCAGTTGGAGTTTGTGCTATGCAG SEQ ID NO: 2365 235252_at GGATCTCATCAGCGTGCAAACCTAG SEQ ID NO: 2366 235252_at GTGCAAACCTAGCATCTTCTGTGGC SEQ ID NO: 2367 235252_at CCACAAGCCACACACTTGCTTTTTT SEQ ID NO: 2368 235252_at CCTGGGTTTCTGTCTAACTCGAAGT SEQ ID NO: 2369 235252_at TGTATCGGGTTTTTTTGCCACTGGC SEQ ID NO: 2370 235252_at GGCAAGAACATGCCCTCTGTGCTAA SEQ ID NO: 2371 235252_at ACTCGAAGTCTTGAATCCTAGCTAG SEQ ID NO: 2372 235252_at CTGTGCTAAGCCAGGCCTGGGTGTC SEQ ID NO: 2373 235252_at GTAGCAAAGTTGATCTCTCCATGTC SEQ ID NO: 2374 235826_at ATTTTTCTGCAGGGGTACACCCACA SEQ ID NO: 2375 235826_at GGGTACACCCACATCTATTGTATTA SEQ ID NO: 2376 235826_at TTTTCTCTGGTTGATCGGGATGCAT SEQ ID NO: 2377 235826_at GATCGGGATGCATTATCCACCAGAA SEQ ID NO: 2378 235826_at AAAACACTGTAGACGACTCACTCAC SEQ ID NO: 2379 235826_at ATCAAGTCTTATGAGCCAGGTGCAG SEQ ID NO: 2380 235826_at GAGGGTGGAGTGTGATATGATCGTC SEQ ID NO: 2381 235826_at AGCACTGCATCCTGGACAAGATAGG SEQ ID NO: 2382 235826_at ACTGCATTGTACATTCATTGAGGAC SEQ ID NO: 2383 235826_at GAGGACAGGGACTTTAAACTTCATT SEQ ID NO: 2384 235826_at ACTTCATTATATTGCTGTTGCTGTG SEQ ID NO: 2385 236193_at TAATACCTTAGGTTAAGGCCACATA SEQ ID NO: 2386 236193_at GCCTTTTCTGCGGAGGACTCTGAAG SEQ ID NO: 2387 236193_at GGAGGACTCTGAAGGGATACTAAAC SEQ ID NO: 2388 236193_at TACTTTTACCTACATTGTCTCTTAT SEQ ID NO: 2389 236193_at GAAAGTGTTTACTATGGACTGAATT SEQ ID NO: 2390 236193_at TCATATATTGAAGCCATAAACCCCA SEQ ID NO: 2391 236193_at TAAACCCCAATATGACTCTATTCCT SEQ ID NO: 2392 236193_at GACTCTATTCCTAGACAGGACTTAT SEQ ID NO: 2393 236193_at GGTCATTAGGATGGGTTCCTAACTG SEQ ID NO: 2394 236193_at ATGTTTCTTGTTAGCCATGACCCTA SEQ ID NO: 2395 236193_at CTTGTTAGCCATGACCCTATAAGAA SEQ ID NO: 2396 238041_at GACTCAGATTGTATGTCTCTAAGAA SEQ ID NO: 2397 238041_at TTCTCTTTCTCTTTGCAGATTTCTA SEQ ID NO: 2398 238041_at TGCAGATTTCTAGGCCGCTTCTGCT SEQ ID NO: 2399 238041_at CTTTTCTATAGTTCATGTTTTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 2400 238041_at AAGAATCTTAAGCTTTGGCATTAAA SEQ ID NO: 2401 238041_at GCTTTGGCATTAAATAGTCCTCGAT SEQ ID NO: 2402 238041_at AGTCCTCGATTCAAATCTAAGCTCA SEQ ID NO: 2403 238041_at TAAGCTCAACATCTGATTAACTTCA SEQ ID NO: 2404 238041_at GGAAAGCTCTTATGGTTCTTGTCAC SEQ ID NO: 2405 238041_at GCTCTTATGGTTCTTGTCACCTAAG SEQ ID NO: 2406 238041_at GAGACCATCTAGTAAATGACCTCAT SEQ ID NO: 2407 238488_at GAGGCACAGGTCATTCTTTTTGAAC SEQ ID NO: 2408 238488_at AAACTTCAGTGCCATGGACATGATT SEQ ID NO: 2409 238488_at GAGACTACAGCAGTGTTACCTGTGC SEQ ID NO: 2410 238488_at ACAACTTACTACTTCTGTTACCTTG SEQ ID NO: 2411 238488_at AGTGCTCTACCGAATGATGCTGCTT SEQ ID NO: 2412 238488_at GACATTTTGCTAGCTTTTTTCATCT SEQ ID NO: 2413 238488_at CTTTTTTCATCTTAGCTTGTGTTTT SEQ ID NO: 2414 238488_at GAATACTACAGCTTTTATCAGTCAG SEQ ID NO: 2415 238488_at AACTGCCTCAATTTGTAACACTTCC SEQ ID NO: 2416 238488_at TAACACTTCCCCAAATTCTCTAGAA SEQ ID NO: 2417 238488_at ATTCTCTAGAAAGTCCTGGCTTGGA SEQ ID NO: 2418 238633_at GCTGTGGCTTTACCTTGTTGTGGAA SEQ ID NO: 2419 238633_at GGAAGTTGGGTTCGGACACCAGGAT SEQ ID NO: 2420 238633_at ATAATAGAATCTTCCTCTCATTTCC SEQ ID NO: 2421 238633_at TTCCCCCAGATCCTTGACAGTATAA SEQ ID NO: 2422 238633_at GGAATTGCATACCTTGGTTTTCAGG SEQ ID NO: 2423 238633_at GGAAGTCCAGGAGTCGCGTGGATTT SEQ ID NO: 2424 238633_at ACTGTAATACTTCTCTTGGTACTGT SEQ ID NO: 2425 238633_at AGCTCAGATTGTCTAGTTGGGCACT SEQ ID NO: 2426 238633_at GGGCACTGACTTTCAGCACATTGTC SEQ ID NO: 2427 238633_at GTCTCATGAGACACTACCTCTTAAT SEQ ID NO: 2428 238633_at GAGTAGCATGGCCATTTGTTTATTT SEQ ID NO: 2429 238974_at CATTTATTTTCACATGATTAACTGA SEQ ID NO: 2430 238974_at AAATCTAGGTTGTCTATCCAGTATG SEQ ID NO: 2431 238974_at GTCTATCCAGTATGTGAATGCTTAA SEQ ID NO: 2432 238974_at GAGTAAGTCACCAGGTACACAAAAC SEQ ID NO: 2433 238974_at ATATATTCAAGTTGATCCATATTCA SEQ ID NO: 2434 238974_at AATACTTCAGATTGGTCCTTTGTCC SEQ ID NO: 2435 238974_at TGGTCCTTTGTCCACATTTGTTTAA SEQ ID NO: 2436 238974_at ATCCTTGGCTAAATTCACATGTATC SEQ ID NO: 2437 238974_at TATACTTTTGGATTGTGCCTTTGTC SEQ ID NO: 2438 238974_at TTTTGGATTGTGCCTTTGTCATGAG SEQ ID NO: 2439 238974_at AGCTGAGTTACTGAATTCTATAAGG SEQ ID NO: 2440 239835_at GTATGTAGCACTTTCCTATATATTT SEQ ID NO: 2441 239835_at TGAAAACTGGACTGGGTATAACTAT SEQ ID NO: 2442 239835_at AAAAGGCACAATGGTACTACAGAAT SEQ ID NO: 2443 239835_at GTTTTCTGTTCTACAAAGTTGATGC SEQ ID NO: 2444 239835_at GAATCAGATTCCCTATGTAAAGCAG SEQ ID NO: 2445 239835_at GGAATTCAATGTTCAGTGCTCAGGT SEQ ID NO: 2446 239835_at TGTAGTAAGTACTGTAGTCCTGTGG SEQ ID NO: 2447 239835_at GTAGTCCTGTGGGGGCAAATGTGTA SEQ ID NO: 2448 239835_at GGTCTAACATAATGCCAGTTCCACT SEQ ID NO: 2449 239835_at ATGCCAGTTCCACTTTAACTTTGTT SEQ ID NO: 2450 239835_at GAAGAATGTATGTAGCACTTTCCTA SEQ ID NO: 2451 240165_at AAGGAAGGTCAGTCAGTGAATGGGA SEQ ID NO: 2452 240165_at GAAAGGGAGCTCCTCTAGCATCAAA SEQ ID NO: 2453 240165_at GAGCTCCTCTAGCATCAAACTGTCT SEQ ID NO: 2454 240165_at CAAACTGTCTGCATGTCGAGTCTCA SEQ ID NO: 2455 240165_at CTGCATGTCGAGTCTCAGAAAAACA SEQ ID NO: 2456 240165_at AACAAGGATTCGTCAGTCAACCCCT SEQ ID NO: 2457 240165_at CCCCTTTCTGCATGCACAGTGGATT SEQ ID NO: 2458 240165_at GCATGCACAGTGGATTTAGGGTAAA SEQ ID NO: 2459 240165_at TAAAGTTTATGTTACCCTGTCTTTG SEQ ID NO: 2460 240165_at AATGACTCATGAACTTAAGGTACTT SEQ ID NO: 2461 240165_at CCATAGCGGAGAACTACTGAGTTAA SEQ ID NO: 2462 243010_at CTTAGCCTGACAGTGTCCTGTTCTC SEQ ID NO: 2463 243010_at GAAATACACCCACTCTCTTGGAATA SEQ ID NO: 2464 243010_at ATGACGTACCACTCAGTTGGACCCT SEQ ID NO: 2465 243010_at GACCCTCAAGAGTCACTGCTTTGTC SEQ ID NO: 2466 243010_at CGCACGCTTCCATTTGATGCATTTG SEQ ID NO: 2467 243010_at ATGTCATTGTCCTTGAGACCCTACA SEQ ID NO: 2468 243010_at GAGACCCTACATGTGCAGTTTGGCT SEQ ID NO: 2469 243010_at TTTCCTGCAGGCTTTTCCATGAGTA SEQ ID NO: 2470 243010_at GAACAAATCTGTATGGCTTTTCCCC SEQ ID NO: 2471 243010_at GTGAACTTGTCCTAGTATGCTTGCC SEQ ID NO: 2472 243010_at CTTGCCTCACAAACGTTTTAGCCAT SEQ ID NO: 2473 243092_at GGTGATGTTCTCTAGCCAAATTCGA SEQ ID NO: 2474 243092_at AGCAGTTTCGCTTATTTGATTATTC SEQ ID NO: 2475 243092_at ACGCATTACGTGTACCAGAAACTGT SEQ ID NO: 2476 243092_at GGTACACTTAACTGTGGAGCTGGGG SEQ ID NO: 2477 243092_at ACATGCCGCCTTAAGTGAGTTCAGA SEQ ID NO: 2478 243092_at GAGTTCAGATGGCTTATCTTCCGGT SEQ ID NO: 2479 243092_at GAGGCATCAAGTACACAGGTCCGTT SEQ ID NO: 2480 243092_at ACAGGTCCGTTGTAAACCAGTGTCT SEQ ID NO: 2481 243092_at AACCAGTGTCTTAAGTGCTAACCTT SEQ ID NO: 2482 243092_at TGCTAACCTTATCACATTTGCTATT SEQ ID NO: 2483 243092_at TGCCTTGTCTGTACACCTGGATTAA SEQ ID NO: 2484 243835_at GTAATTGTCCAAATGTAATGCTGCT SEQ ID NO: 2485 243835_at GCTATGTATATTATTTGGGTTCCAG SEQ ID NO: 2486 243835_at TTCTCAAAACACTCAGTGTCCTTAC SEQ ID NO: 2487 243835_at GTGTCCTTACAACTGCAGCTAAAAT SEQ ID NO: 2488 243835_at CAACCTCTCCTTGAATGTAGATACA SEQ ID NO: 2489 243835_at GGTTTTGCAGTCAATTCTGAATGGA SEQ ID NO: 2490 243835_at ATGTGGCTTCAGATCATTTGAACGA SEQ ID NO: 2491 243835_at GCAACATTATCTCTCTCTAATCTGC SEQ ID NO: 2492 243835_at ATATTCCCTAGATTGTGTTGCCACT SEQ ID NO: 2493 243835_at TTGTGTTGCCACTGTATTGATTCTG SEQ ID NO: 2494 243835_at AATTTGGCTTGTTTATGCGTGATTT SEQ ID NO: 2495 244110_at AAAATTGCATTGGCCAACTTGGAGG SEQ ID NO: 2496 244110_at GGCCAACTTGGAGGCTTCAGTGTTA SEQ ID NO: 2497 244110_at AGAAGAATGTTCACTTTTGTCATCT SEQ ID NO: 2498 244110_at GTCATCTAATTTTACACTGCTCCTT SEQ ID NO: 2499 244110_at ACACTGCTCCTTCAGCAAACTGACT SEQ ID NO: 2500 244110_at GAGAGATAACCCTGTTTACCTTTAG SEQ ID NO: 2501 244110_at AGTTGTGGATTCCTCAGTCTTACTC SEQ ID NO: 2502 244110_at GTCTTACTCCCATTACTATTGGTCA SEQ ID NO: 2503 244110_at TATTGGTCATTCAACAGCCCATCTT SEQ ID NO: 2504 244110_at GTAACCTGACTTTTGCGCCAGAATA SEQ ID NO: 2505 244110_at AGTTAACCACTTAAACTTGTCATAT SEQ ID NO: 2506 244519_at TTAGAAAACTACTCGGATGCTCCAA SEQ ID NO: 2507 244519_at CTACTCGGATGCTCCAATGACACCA SEQ ID NO: 2508 244519_at CAATGACACCAAAACAGATTCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 2509 244519_at TCTCGCATGCCTCAATGCTATGCTA SEQ ID NO: 2510 244519_at CGCATGCCTCAATGCTATGCTACAT SEQ ID NO: 2511 244519_at GCCTCAATGCTATGCTACATTCCAA SEQ ID NO: 2512 244519_at CAATGCTATGCTACATTCCAATTCA SEQ ID NO: 2513 244519_at TGTTTTATAAACTGCCTGGCCGAAT SEQ ID NO: 2514 244519_at ATAAACTGCCTGGCCGAATCAGCCT SEQ ID NO: 2515 244519_at ATCAGCCTTTTCACGCTCAAGGTGT SEQ ID NO: 2516 244519_at GCCTTTTCACGCTCAAGGTGTGAGC SEQ ID NO: 2517 60084_at GTTATAATCTCTTCCTAGCTAATGG SEQ ID NO: 2518 60084_at CTCTTCCTAGCTAATGGGCTTACTC SEQ ID NO: 2519 60084_at CTTCCTAGCTAATGGGCTTACTCAA SEQ ID NO: 2520 60084_at TAGCTAATGGGCTTACTCAAAGATT SEQ ID NO: 2521 60084_at TGGGCTTACTCAAAGATTCACCACC SEQ ID NO: 2522 60084_at CTAGCAATGATATTCTCAGTTGTTT SEQ ID NO: 2523 60084_at AGCAATGATATTCTCAGTTGTTTCT SEQ ID NO: 2524 60084_at GCAATGATATTCTCAGTTGTTTCTC SEQ ID NO: 2525 60084_at CTCAGTTGTTTCTCTCTTGTGGTGC SEQ ID NO: 2526 60084_at TTCTCTCTTGTGGTGCAGAGTTGCA SEQ ID NO: 2527 60084_at TCTCTTGTGGTGCAGAGTTGCATTG SEQ ID NO: 2528 60084_at CTCTTGTGGTGCAGAGTTGCATTGG SEQ ID NO: 2529 60084_at TGCAGAGTTGCATTGGGTTTTCTAC SEQ ID NO: 2530 60084_at TGCATTGGGTTTTCTACATTTTCCC SEQ ID NO: 2531 60084_at GCATTGGGTTTTCTACATTTTCCCA SEQ ID NO: 2532 60084_at CCCACTGAGTCTTCCCTGTTGTAAA SEQ ID NO: 2533

TABLE 18 Probe Set ID Probe sequence Sequence ID No. 201018_at GCTTCAGGTTCTTCACCTCTAAGAT SEQ ID NO: 1012 201018_at GGGGATGATGAAAACAGTACCTGTC SEQ ID NO: 1013 201018_at GTACCTGTCATGCAGAATTGTTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1014 201018_at TGCTCTTTTCACTTGATATCCAGTA SEQ ID NO: 1015 201018_at GAAGGTGCATGTCTTCTGTATTCTG SEQ ID NO: 1016 201018_at CCCATTTCTTTTGCGTGCAGTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1017 201018_at TTGCGTGCAGTCTTTGATTCGTACA SEQ ID NO: 1018 201018_at GAAATTGCTACCAAACTCATTTAAT SEQ ID NO: 1019 201018_at ATACCAACTGTTCTATATTTCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1020 201018_at ATCTTCAGTGATTCCTTTTACTATA SEQ ID NO: 1021 201018_at AGGTTTCCTTTCCCATCATATGGAA SEQ ID NO: 1022 201080_at CCCATTCAGACAACTGTTCCCCAAT SEQ ID NO: 1023 201080_at CTACCAGCCATCTGCAGGGGTCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1024 201080_at GTGCCACTTATGAAGAGTGCCCCAT SEQ ID NO: 1025 201080_at AAAAGGAGACTCAGCTGTCCCTTGG SEQ ID NO: 1026 201080_at CTTGTGCCAGTATCCCAGGGCAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1027 201080_at CCTTGCGCAGAGCCACTGTGAGAGG SEQ ID NO: 1028 201080_at TGAGAGGCGGTGGGAGCCAACACCC SEQ ID NO: 1029 201080_at ATTAAGTTCATATCCACCTTTTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1030 201080_at CCAAGTGTGTGACTTCTCCATATCC SEQ ID NO: 1031 201080_at TGGGAATTTTCAATCCCCTGTGCTT SEQ ID NO: 1032 201080_at TGCTTGTCTAACGTCTGCTTTAAAA SEQ ID NO: 1033 202599_s_at ATTTAAGTTGTGATTACCTGCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1034 202599_s_at AAGTGGCATGGGGGACCCTGTGCAT SEQ ID NO: 1035 202599_s_at GACCCTGTGCATCTGTGCATTTGGC SEQ ID NO: 1036 202599_s_at TCCATTTCTGGACATGACGTCTGTG SEQ ID NO: 1037 202599_s_at GACGTCTGTGGTTTAAGCTTTGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1038 202599_s_at AATGTGCTTTGATTCGAAGGGTCTT SEQ ID NO: 1039 202599_s_at TAATCGTCAACCACTTTTAAACATA SEQ ID NO: 1040 202599_s_at AGAATTCACACAACTACTTTCATGA SEQ ID NO: 1041 202599_s_at ATTCCAAGAGTATCCCAGTATTAGC SEQ ID NO: 1042 202599_s_at ATATAGGCACATTACCATTCATAGT SEQ ID NO: 1043 202599_s_at AATTTGATGCGATCTGCTCAGTAAT SEQ ID NO: 1044 203106_s_at TATTATTGAATGTACCCCTCAGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1045 203106_s_at AGCATTTCCTTATCCCAAGACTAGT SEQ ID NO: 1046 203106_s_at CCAAGACTAGTGTGCTTTCTGCTAC SEQ ID NO: 1047 203106_s_at CTTTCTGCTACACTGCTAGTTTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1048 203106_s_at GCTACACTGCTAGTTTTCAGTTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1049 203106_s_at AACATTACCAATTTACAGATTCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1050 203106_s_at TTACATTTACATTAATCCTCACTTA SEQ ID NO: 1051 203106_s_at TGAGCAAGCTCATTTCCAGAAAAGT SEQ ID NO: 1052 203106_s_at TTTCAGTGAAGTCATTTTGCTTCAG SEQ ID NO: 1053 203106_s_at ATTATCCTAGTTACCAAGTCCTATT SEQ ID NO: 1054 203106_s_at TATGTTCGTTTATCATTTCAGAAAT SEQ ID NO: 1055 204837_at ATTCATGCTCTGCTAGTCTATGCCT SEQ ID NO: 1056 204837_at GTCTATGCCTGCAACTCCAAATGTT SEQ ID NO: 1057 204837_at CAGTATTTCCCACCTACATTTCTGT SEQ ID NO: 1058 204837_at TATGACCGAGTCTAGTTTTTCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1059 204837_at AAATACTTTTCATCACCAATTGCCC SEQ ID NO: 1060 204837_at TGCTTCCTCAGCCTTGTAGCAAAGG SEQ ID NO: 1061 204837_at AGCAAAGGCTACACAGCAGCCCACA SEQ ID NO: 1062 204837_at GCCCACAGTCCACAGTCTTTTTGGG SEQ ID NO: 1063 204837_at CTGCCACCTTCTTTAAGCTCAGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1064 204837_at TTTGACTTACTTTCTTTGCTGTAGT SEQ ID NO: 1065 204837_at TTCTCGTAGCTCTGCGTTGTGTGAA SEQ ID NO: 1066 205094_at AGAAAGCATTTACCTGCCTGTCTGT SEQ ID NO: 1067 205094_at GCATTTACCTGCCTGTCTGTAAGGT SEQ ID NO: 1068 205094_at GTGGAAATTTCATCAGTTTGCAAAC SEQ ID NO: 1069 205094_at AAAAAGCTCCTTCCATATACTGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1070 205094_at GAGACATTTGTTAAGTGACATCTAT SEQ ID NO: 1071 205094_at GACATCTATTGTTTATCAGCTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1072 205094_at GGATATTCCTTTATGAGCTCTCCAT SEQ ID NO: 1073 205094_at AGCTCTCCATATCCTTCTTGAGAAA SEQ ID NO: 1074 205094_at GAGAGTAGTCTGAAGATTCCTGTGT SEQ ID NO: 1075 205094_at AATAAGTTCTTTCTGCTTGCTGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1076 205094_at TCTGCTTGCTGCTAAGAGTTTGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1077 205608_s_at AGAGCAGCCTGATCTTACACGGTGC SEQ ID NO: 1078 205608_s_at GTGCAAATGTGCCCTCATGTTAACA SEQ ID NO: 1079 205608_s_at TCAAAGGGCCCAGTTACTCCTTACG SEQ ID NO: 1080 205608_s_at TACTCCTTACGTTCCACAACTATGA SEQ ID NO: 1081 205608_s_at GCAAACAATATTGTCTCCCTTCCAG SEQ ID NO: 1082 205608_s_at GGTTCTTGACCGTGAATCTGGAGCC SEQ ID NO: 1083 205608_s_at AATCTGGAGCCGTTTGAGTTCACAA SEQ ID NO: 1084 205608_s_at GTCTCTACTTGGGGTGACAGTGCTC SEQ ID NO: 1085 205608_s_at TGCTCACGTGGCTCGACTATAGAAA SEQ ID NO: 1086 205608_s_at AAAACTCCACTGACTGTCGGGCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1087 205608_s_at GCTTGCTGTGCTTCAAACTACTACT SEQ ID NO: 1088 205702_at GAATCCCTTAATCTACAATATCACA SEQ ID NO: 1089 205702_at TCCTTTCTGCTGTCTCAGGTGTTAT SEQ ID NO: 1090 205702_at TGAGTTAAATGCCTGGACTCTCCCC SEQ ID NO: 1091 205702_at TCCCCTGGCTGGTATCAAAACTTAC SEQ ID NO: 1092 205702_at AAACCAGTGAGATACCCACCTGCTT SEQ ID NO: 1093 205702_at CCACCTGCTTGTTCACATGCACAGG SEQ ID NO: 1094 205702_at GTTCACATGCACAGGTGCTCTCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1095 205702_at GCTCTCAGCTCTGCAAAGCGAATGA SEQ ID NO: 1096 205702_at GGAGGAGCAAGTCCTTTTCCAACTG SEQ ID NO: 1097 205702_at TTTTCCAACTGGGTGTGCATGCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1098 205702_at GATAGTTTAGCTTCAGTACTGTGAC SEQ ID NO: 1099 206874_s_at GAAGGGTCTCTGATTTCTTGAGCAT SEQ ID NO: 1100 206874_s_at GAAGCCAAATTCTGTCCAAGTATTA SEQ ID NO: 1101 206874_s_at GAGAGTTCCAGTTCTAATAGTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1102 206874_s_at AATGGCTGTATTGTTGCTATTCCGT SEQ ID NO: 1103 206874_s_at GCTATTCCGTTGCTGACATGTTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1104 206874_s_at AAAGCTTTAACATTCCTGCTACTAA SEQ ID NO: 1105 206874_s_at GCGGAGAGTGTTTGCCAGGTTTCAA SEQ ID NO: 1106 206874_s_at AGGTTTCAATGTGGGCTGCAGCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1107 206874_s_at CTCCTTCTCTGGTTTGCAGTGTAAT SEQ ID NO: 1108 206874_s_at GATTATGCCTCTTATCTACTTGAGA SEQ ID NO: 1109 206874_s_at GAGAGCAACATGTCTTTTCAATCAT SEQ ID NO: 1110 206945_at TTCTCTTGTGCTTCTTGGAGTCTGT SEQ ID NO: 1111 206945_at GTGGCTTGGCATTTCTGTCATACAA SEQ ID NO: 1112 206945_at TACAAGTACTGCAAGCGCTCTAAGC SEQ ID NO: 1113 206945_at AACAGGAATTGAGCCCGGTGTCTTC SEQ ID NO: 1114 206945_at GTTACCACCTCAAGTTCTATGAAGC SEQ ID NO: 1115 206945_at GCCACCAAACACCTTAGGGTCTTAG SEQ ID NO: 1116 206945_at AGACTCTGCTGATACTGGACTTCTC SEQ ID NO: 1117 206945_at AAAGTCCTGCTGCACCGTTAGAGAT SEQ ID NO: 1118 206945_at TCTCCATCTTGCTCCAGTATCAGAG SEQ ID NO: 1119 206945_at GATACTGGTCTAGTGGGTCTGTGAA SEQ ID NO: 1120 206945_at TAGACTGCAATATCATCTCCTGCCC SEQ ID NO: 1121 207737_at GAAGTTTTCAGTAATTGTGACTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1122 207737_at GGAAGTACATCCAGTAAACAATGCC SEQ ID NO: 1123 207737_at TAAACAATGCCATGTACATTCCCCC SEQ ID NO: 1124 207737_at TCCCCATTTGCTGTCCAGAGTGTGA SEQ ID NO: 1125 207737_at GAGTGTGACCACAGTTAACGGTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1126 207737_at GTTAACGGTTAATGTGCATCTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1127 207737_at GCATCTTTTATGTACTTAACATGTC SEQ ID NO: 1128 207737_at GAACTTCCATGTTAGTATGTGCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1129 207737_at GTGCAGCTGTAACACATTCTTTTTT SEQ ID NO: 1130 207737_at ATTCTTTTTTTAGTAGCCACATAGT SEQ ID NO: 1131 207737_at AAAATACATTACCCATTTCCTGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1132 207968_s_at AGTGCAGACCTGTCATCTCTGTCTG SEQ ID NO: 1133 207968_s_at TCTCTGTCTGGGTTTAACACCGCCA SEQ ID NO: 1134 207968_s_at CGCTCTTCACCTTGGTTCAGTAACT SEQ ID NO: 1135 207968_s_at GCAACACCTACATAACATGCCACCA SEQ ID NO: 1136 207968_s_at CCATCTGCCCTCAGTCAGTTGGGAG SEQ ID NO: 1137 207968_s_at CTTGCACTAGCACTCATTTATCTCA SEQ ID NO: 1138 207968_s_at CCTTCTACTCAAAGCCTCAACATCA SEQ ID NO: 1139 207968_s_at GGCGGGGAGATCTCCTGTTGACAGC SEQ ID NO: 1140 207968_s_at GCAGCTGTAGCAGTTCGTACGACGG SEQ ID NO: 1141 207968_s_at GGATCACCGGAACGAATTCCACTCC SEQ ID NO: 1142 207968_s_at CAAGCGCATGCGACTTTCTGAAGGA SEQ ID NO: 1143 208634_s_at TAAACTGATTTGTTGCTCCCTATCC SEQ ID NO: 1144 208634_s_at ACCAGTAACTCTTGTGTTCACCAGG SEQ ID NO: 1145 208634_s_at GGGATAGGCTCGTTGGTGACATTGT SEQ ID NO: 1146 208634_s_at TAAATGGTCGATCAACTTCCCACAA SEQ ID NO: 1147 208634_s_at TGAATTCCACGAGCCTGTTCTGAAA SEQ ID NO: 1148 208634_s_at AAGACAAACACGTGCTCGTCCTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1149 208634_s_at TAATGGAGTTCACCAGCACACTTGT SEQ ID NO: 1150 208634_s_at AGCACACTTGTTAACCAGTCCTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1151 208634_s_at TTTGCTTTCGTCTTTTTTTGTGCGT SEQ ID NO: 1152 208634_s_at ATGAAAAGGGGCTGTCTGGGGCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1153 208634_s_at AGCTCCGACCATGTTGCTGTGTGAT SEQ ID NO: 1154 209200_at GGAGCAATCCAAGCCACATATCTTC SEQ ID NO: 1155 209200_at ATCTGGTATTGCATTTTGCCTTCCC SEQ ID NO: 1156 209200_at CTTCCCTGTTCATACCTCAAATTGA SEQ ID NO: 1157 209200_at AAGTGACGGATTCTGTTGTGGTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1158 209200_at GAATGCAGTACCAGTGTTCTCTTCG SEQ ID NO: 1159 209200_at GTAGACCTGGGTCACTGTAGGCATA SEQ ID NO: 1160 209200_at GGACTTGGATTGCTTCAGATGGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1161 209200_at TCTTTTCCTGGGGACTTGTTTCCAT SEQ ID NO: 1162 209200_at ATAGAGGCTCACAGCGGCATAAGCT SEQ ID NO: 1163 209200_at TGGACTTTGTCGCCACTAGATGACA SEQ ID NO: 1164 209200_at CCACATCTGTGTATCTCAAGGGACT SEQ ID NO: 1165 209425_at CTACCTCACTAGTAGTTCACGTGAT SEQ ID NO: 1166 209425_at GTAGTTCACGTGATGTCTGACAGAT SEQ ID NO: 1167 209425_at TGAGATACTCTTGTGAGGTCACTCT SEQ ID NO: 1168 209425_at CTTGTGAGGTCACTCTAATGCCCTG SEQ ID NO: 1169 209425_at TAAGCTTTCATATTCTAGCCTTCAG SEQ ID NO: 1170 209425_at CATATTCTAGCCTTCAGTCTTGTTC SEQ ID NO: 1171 209425_at CAGTCTTGTTCTTCAACCATTTTTA SEQ ID NO: 1172 209425_at TTAGGAACTTTCCCATAAGGTTATG SEQ ID NO: 1173 209425_at ATAAGGTTATGTTTTCCAGCCCAGG SEQ ID NO: 1174 209425_at TCCAGCCCAGGCATGGAGGATCACT SEQ ID NO: 1175 209425_at GGCCACAGTGAATTAGGATTGCACC SEQ ID NO: 1176 210132_at GGGGAGGGGACTAGATGGGCAAGGG SEQ ID NO: 1177 210132_at TGGGCAAGGGGCAGCACTGCCTGCT SEQ ID NO: 1178 210132_at TTCCTTCCCCTGTTTACAGCAATAA SEQ ID NO: 1179 210132_at TTACAGCAATAAGCACGTCCTCCTC SEQ ID NO: 1180 210132_at ACTCCCACTTCCAGGATTGTGGTTT SEQ ID NO: 1181 210132_at CAAGTTTACAAGTAGACACCCCTGG SEQ ID NO: 1182 210132_at AAGGGGTGGGCATTGGGGTGCCAGG SEQ ID NO: 1183 210132_at CCAGGCAGGCATGTACAGACTCTAT SEQ ID NO: 1184 210132_at GACAGGACCTATGCAACGCACAGAC SEQ ID NO: 1185 210132_at CGCACAGACACTTTTGGAGACCGTA SEQ ID NO: 1186 210132_at CTTTCATACTCTGCTCTTAGTCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1187 211255_x_at GACTCCCTCAAGCAAGCTGTGGGGC SEQ ID NO: 1188 211255_x_at CTCCCCACTATCCTGTGGTGTGTTG SEQ ID NO: 1189 211255_x_at CTTCGGGTCCTCAGATGTGTAGCAA SEQ ID NO: 1190 211255_x_at GACACTGGGCAGTTTATGCTATTCA SEQ ID NO: 1191 211255_x_at GTACATCAGACTGCGGGTTCGGGCT SEQ ID NO: 1192 211255_x_at ACTGCCAGCATGAGACTGCTCTGCA SEQ ID NO: 1193 211255_x_at TCTGCAGGGCAATGTCTTCTCTAAC SEQ ID NO: 1194 211255_x_at GTTTGAGCGCTTTAACCAGGCCAAC SEQ ID NO: 1195 211255_x_at ACATCAAGTTCTCTGAGCTCACCTA SEQ ID NO: 1196 211255_x_at TACCTCGATGCATTCTGGCGTGACT SEQ ID NO: 1197 211255_x_at GGCGTGACTACATCAATGGCTCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1198 211877_s_at GCTGTGGCGCTGGCATAAGTCACGC SEQ ID NO: 1199 211877_s_at CCTGCTGCAGGCTTCTGAAGGCGGG SEQ ID NO: 1200 211877_s_at AAGGCGGGTTGGCAGGTATGCCCAC SEQ ID NO: 1201 211877_s_at GTCACATTTTGTAGGCGTGGACGGG SEQ ID NO: 1202 211877_s_at GTAGGCGTGGACGGGGTACAGGCTT SEQ ID NO: 1203 211877_s_at TCTCTCTCATTGCGGACTCGCAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1204 211877_s_at CGCAGAAGAGTCACCTGATTTTCCC SEQ ID NO: 1205 211877_s_at GAAAAGCGAGCCACTCTTGATAGCT SEQ ID NO: 1206 211877_s_at GCCACTCTTGATAGCTGAAGACTCA SEQ ID NO: 1207 211877_s_at GAAGACTCAGCTATCATTTTAGGCA SEQ ID NO: 1208 211877_s_at GGCAAATGTGACCCGACAAGTAATC SEQ ID NO: 1209 212397_at GAAGTGACTGTTGTACCATGGTTGT SEQ ID NO: 1210 212397_at GTACCATGGTTGTGCACATGCTTCA SEQ ID NO: 1211 212397_at GTGCACATGCTTCAGAATCCTATGG SEQ ID NO: 1212 212397_at GAATATTCCTACTTGCAGTACATCA SEQ ID NO: 1213 212397_at GAATGGATGGTGGACCCTACTATTC SEQ ID NO: 1214 212397_at GTGGACCCTACTATTCATGTTTTGA SEQ ID NO: 1215 212397_at TGTGCACTACCATAGCTACATCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1216 212397_at ATATTTTGCTGTTTATGATCTATTT SEQ ID NO: 1217 212397_at TTTAAGGCTGTGTGAATTTTTCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1218 212397_at TAGCAGTCGCGAGCACATGTTCATA SEQ ID NO: 1219 212397_at TCCCAGTAGGCTTTTACCATTAGCA SEQ ID NO: 1220 212851_at AATTCAAATTGCACCTCTTTTCTTA SEQ ID NO: 1221 212851_at TTTGCATTCTTCTAGCCAGTGATTG SEQ ID NO: 1222 212851_at ATGCTTTCTTTGCCACTCTAAGTAA SEQ ID NO: 1223 212851_at GCTGGCTGTTTATAACTGCATCGCA SEQ ID NO: 1224 212851_at GCATCGCACTTCTAGTTGTGGCTTG SEQ ID NO: 1225 212851_at TGTTTCATGCTAGGCTTTTCCTGGC SEQ ID NO: 1226 212851_at TTTCCTGGCAGCATGTCCATTGCAG SEQ ID NO: 1227 212851_at GAAACCACCAGCATTGAGCTAACCC SEQ ID NO: 1228 212851_at GCTAACCCAGTACATGCTAGGACCT SEQ ID NO: 1229 212851_at TGTCCTAGAGGGGCCACTTTTCATT SEQ ID NO: 1230 212851_at GGCCACTTTTCATTACCTGAGTTAT SEQ ID NO: 1231 213313_at GTGATATGCTGACAGGCTGACACGC SEQ ID NO: 1232 213313_at GCTGACACGCAGATGGTTTTGTCCT SEQ ID NO: 1233 213313_at CTGCGTTCAGTGTTGAGGCGGCTGC SEQ ID NO: 1234 213313_at GCGGCTGCTTACAAGAGGCACTGGT SEQ ID NO: 1235 213313_at GACACTCGGGTTGTTTTGTAGCTCT SEQ ID NO: 1236 213313_at GTAGCTCTTTTTCTTATTGGCTGTA SEQ ID NO: 1237 213313_at TATTGGCTGTACTAACGCTTGCTGA SEQ ID NO: 1238 213313_at AACGCTTGCTGAGGTTATCTGTAAT SEQ ID NO: 1239 213313_at GCTTTCTGTGTCTTTCTTGTTCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1240 213313_at GCTAGGTGTGTGGACATTGTGCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1241 213313_at GTGCTAAGGTAGTTTCAGTGTGTCA SEQ ID NO: 1242 213639_s_at TGTCTGGAATGTGGCCTTCCACGGT SEQ ID NO: 1243 213639_s_at GCACATCCACGGTGGGTGAGTGGCC SEQ ID NO: 1244 213639_s_at GTCCTTGGTGGGTTTAGTCATCTCG SEQ ID NO: 1245 213639_s_at GTCATCTCGGAAGTCGTAGGGCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1246 213639_s_at GAACGTTCCAGCCAGGCAGTGGTTG SEQ ID NO: 1247 213639_s_at AGGCAGTGGTTGTTCCTCATAGGTA SEQ ID NO: 1248 213639_s_at TAGGTAGGTGGCCTTGGCCTTCATC SEQ ID NO: 1249 213639_s_at TCCATTGCATTTGTCACCTAGTCAC SEQ ID NO: 1250 213639_s_at GTATATACGTGCACATTTGACCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1251 213639_s_at TTCTCATTCCCTTAACTGACATTAT SEQ ID NO: 1252 213639_s_at TTTAGTGTCAGAGGCCGAGCACAGT SEQ ID NO: 1253 214738_s_at TTAGATTCAGATTCCTGGTGCCTCC SEQ ID NO: 1254 214738_s_at CCTGGGAACAGACTCCTGTAGACCC SEQ ID NO: 1255 214738_s_at CTAGTCTCCTGAGCCTATAGAGCCC SEQ ID NO: 1256 214738_s_at TAGAGCCCCCAGGAGACTGGGACCC SEQ ID NO: 1257 214738_s_at GGGACCCAAAGAACTTCACAGCACA SEQ ID NO: 1258 214738_s_at TCACAGCACACTTACCGAATGCAGA SEQ ID NO: 1259 214738_s_at TGCAGAGAGCAGCTTTCCTGGCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1260 214738_s_at GCAGAGGCTCTGAAGCACTTTCCTT SEQ ID NO: 1261 214738_s_at TAGCAACAGCAGCTCTGTACCTCAT SEQ ID NO: 1262 214738_s_at TCTGTTGATCCCACCTTTGAAGAGG SEQ ID NO: 1263 214738_s_at GACACAGTGCTCACCTTAATTGCGC SEQ ID NO: 1264 214820_at GATTTGGTTTCATCAGAAGCAGCAA SEQ ID NO: 1265 214820_at TTTTTGGTTATGGTGCTATTCCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1266 214820_at GGTGCTATTCCTAAGGTTAACTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1267 214820_at TAACTTTGAATATGTGACACACACA SEQ ID NO: 1268 214820_at CACACACACTCCTAAGTACCTTTAA SEQ ID NO: 1269 214820_at ATATTTTGACAGTTTAGGCTTCATT SEQ ID NO: 1270 214820_at GAACTATTCTGATTATTTGGACTGC SEQ ID NO: 1271 214820_at TGGACTGCATTAATTGGTCACTGAC SEQ ID NO: 1272 214820_at TAATTGGTCACTGACTGGCCATCCA SEQ ID NO: 1273 214820_at CTGGCCATCCAATTACCATTTTTTC SEQ ID NO: 1274 214820_at AATAGTTAGACCCTTGCATACAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1275 219232_s_at AAGCTTCTACTCCTGCAGTAAGCAC SEQ ID NO: 1276 219232_s_at CAGTAAGCACAGATCGCACTGCCTC SEQ ID NO: 1277 219232_s_at GATCGCACTGCCTCAATAACTTGGT SEQ ID NO: 1278 219232_s_at AACTTGGTATTGAGCACGTATTTTG SEQ ID NO: 1279 219232_s_at AATTTCCAGATAAGACATGTCACCA SEQ ID NO: 1280 219232_s_at CACCATTAATTCTCAACGACTGCTC SEQ ID NO: 1281 219232_s_at ACGACTGCTCTATTTTGTTGTACGG SEQ ID NO: 1282 219232_s_at GTACGGTAATAGTTATCACCTTCTA SEQ ID NO: 1283 219232_s_at TGTTTATTGTCTTGTATCCTTTCTC SEQ ID NO: 1284 219232_s_at GTATCCTTTCTCTGGAGTGTAAGCA SEQ ID NO: 1285 219232_s_at AATGCAACATACTCTCAGCACCTAA SEQ ID NO: 1286 219383_at TGTGCTCTTGATGGCTGGGAATTTA SEQ ID NO: 1287 219383_at TCTGCTGATCTGCTGAGAATTTCAA SEQ ID NO: 1288 219383_at TCTACAGACTGACTAACATGCATTA SEQ ID NO: 1289 219383_at GTAACTGATAGCTTCTGTCCTTATT SEQ ID NO: 1290 219383_at GCTTCTGTCCTTATTAGTACACTTA SEQ ID NO: 1291 219383_at GAGACTAGTATTTATTGATCCAGGC SEQ ID NO: 1292 219383_at CATGCTTGGGCTTACTTTTTCAGTT SEQ ID NO: 1293 219383_at AATGCCTTTTCCATATCTTAAATGT SEQ ID NO: 1294 219383_at ATAGACCCATTGTACTTAAGTGCTG SEQ ID NO: 1295 219383_at TAAGTGCTGATGACTGTTAGCCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1296 219383_at AGTTTACAACTTTTTACCATCGATG SEQ ID NO: 1297 219718_at GGTCACCGGATTGAAACTGTCTCAG SEQ ID NO: 1298 219718_at GTCTCAGGACCTTGATGATCTTGCC SEQ ID NO: 1299 219718_at TCTCTACCTGGCCACAGTTCAAGCC SEQ ID NO: 1300 219718_at CTTTGGGGACTCGCTTCATTATAGA SEQ ID NO: 1301 219718_at AGCAGGGCACTCAATCAGTACTCTT SEQ ID NO: 1302 219718_at TCTTTTCCTATGTGGAGGCCTCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1303 219718_at GCGGACATTACTGGCATGCCTGTGG SEQ ID NO: 1304 219718_at AGAGGTGGAGTCCGTTCTTGTGGGT SEQ ID NO: 1305 219718_at CCTCAGGGGATTTCGCTTCTGTACA SEQ ID NO: 1306 219718_at GAAAGTTGTGTTCCCGAGACTACAG SEQ ID NO: 1307 219718_at CAGGGCTTGCAGGTGCTGATGCCAG SEQ ID NO: 1308 220360_at TCAGAAAGTCTGTGTCGGGTCATAA SEQ ID NO: 1309 220360_at GAGCGAGTTGTAAGAACCCATTCAA SEQ ID NO: 1310 220360_at ATGGCAATTTTTGAACTAGTTTCTA SEQ ID NO: 1311 220360_at GAGCTTTCTGGGCATATTGATCTTT SEQ ID NO: 1312 220360_at GTGTGTGCCATCAATCACTTTGTCA SEQ ID NO: 1313 220360_at AAATGTTGCACAGAATCCTTTAAAA SEQ ID NO: 1314 220360_at GAAACACTGGTCATCTGTACAGGAT SEQ ID NO: 1315 220360_at ATGTTCAAGTTTTGCTAATACCAGT SEQ ID NO: 1316 220360_at TCAGGCATTTGCTAAGTAACGATGG SEQ ID NO: 1317 220360_at TTTGAAGTTCAATTTACCATATTTT SEQ ID NO: 1318 220360_at TAAATTGCGCATTCTGCACAGTGAA SEQ ID NO: 1319 221020_s_at CAGTTGGGATGCACTACCTAGCGAA SEQ ID NO: 1320 221020_s_at ACATCTATTGTCATTCCATTGCTAT SEQ ID NO: 1321 221020_s_at TAAAATCCTAGATCCAGTTCTTGTT SEQ ID NO: 1322 221020_s_at AAAATCTGAGCTTCTAGGATCCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1323 221020_s_at CTTCTAGGATCCAGCTGTGTCAACC SEQ ID NO: 1324 221020_s_at CTGTGTCAACCTTTATTTAGCATAT SEQ ID NO: 1325 221020_s_at ATAGATCACCTTTTACAGATGCTGA SEQ ID NO: 1326 221020_s_at GATTAATCTTCATTGGTTTCTCAAA SEQ ID NO: 1327 221020_s_at TAAAAGGGCCTGTACCCAAAGGATG SEQ ID NO: 1328 221020_s_at AAACATCCACGAGTGCTGTTGCACT SEQ ID NO: 1329 221020_s_at CTGTTGCACTACCATCTATTTGTTG SEQ ID NO: 1330 221294_at GCCAACGACCCTTACACAGTTAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1331 221294_at TCCTGATTTGGCTATACTCGACCCT SEQ ID NO: 1332 221294_at TTCAGTGGTGTGCGGAGTCCTGGCA SEQ ID NO: 1333 221294_at CTACTTCACCCTGTTCATCGTGATG SEQ ID NO: 1334 221294_at TGATGATGTTATATGCCCCAGCAGC SEQ ID NO: 1335 221294_at GGCCTGTCCTGATAAGCGCTATGCC SEQ ID NO: 1336 221294_at CTATGCCATGGTCCTGTTTCGAATC SEQ ID NO: 1337 221294_at GTATTTTACATCCTCTGGTTGCCAT SEQ ID NO: 1338 221294_at GGTTGCCATATATCATCTACTTCTT SEQ ID NO: 1339 221294_at GACTAAAGCGCCTCTCAGGGGCTAT SEQ ID NO: 1340 221294_at CAGGGGCTATGTGTACTTCTTGTGC SEQ ID NO: 1341 34726_at TGGCAGCCACATCCAAGACTGGAGC SEQ ID NO: 1342 34726_at CCAAGACTGGAGCAGCAGGCTGGCC SEQ ID NO: 1343 34726_at AGAGAGAGCTCACAGCTGAAGCTCT SEQ ID NO: 1344 34726_at AGCTCACAGCTGAAGCTCTTGGAGG SEQ ID NO: 1345 34726_at GACCAGGAGCATGGTGAAGCCAAGT SEQ ID NO: 1346 34726_at CCAAGTGGCAGATGGGAGCCAACCT SEQ ID NO: 1347 34726_at TTTGCCCTGCATCCTGTCATTTCTG SEQ ID NO: 1348 34726_at GTTCTTGTCCCTCATACATCTTTGG SEQ ID NO: 1349 34726_at TTGTCCCTCATACATCTTTGGAGAA SEQ ID NO: 1350 34726_at CCCTCATACATCTTTGGAGAACCGG SEQ ID NO: 1351 34726_at TCATACATCTTTGGAGAACCGGGCT SEQ ID NO: 1352 34726_at TGCCTTATGGCTCTAGTGTGTGACC SEQ ID NO: 1353 34726_at CTTATGGCTCTAGTGTGTGACCTAC SEQ ID NO: 1354 34726_at ATGGCTCTAGTGTGTGACCTACAGA SEQ ID NO: 1355 34726_at CTCTAGTGTGTGACCTACAGAGCAT SEQ ID NO: 1356 34726_at TGTGACCTACAGAGCATGCTCCACA SEQ ID NO: 1357 34408_at TCCGAGCTAAAATCCCAGGGACCGG SEQ ID NO: 1358 34408_at TTACCTGAGCGACCAGGACTACATT SEQ ID NO: 1359 34408_at GCCTGCTGGGACTTGTAGTTGCCTA SEQ ID NO: 1360 34408_at TGCTGGGACTTGTAGTTGCCTAGAC SEQ ID NO: 1361 34408_at TGGGACTTGTAGTTGCCTAGACAGG SEQ ID NO: 1362 34408_at TGTAGTTGCCTAGACAGGGCACCAC SEQ ID NO: 1363 34408_at GTAGTTGCCTAGACAGGGCACCACC SEQ ID NO: 1364 34408_at AGGCGTTGGTGTCTCCTGGATGCTA SEQ ID NO: 1365 34408_at GGCGTTGGTGTCTCCTGGATGCTAC SEQ ID NO: 1366 34408_at GCGTTGGTGTCTCCTGGATGCTACT SEQ ID NO: 1367 34408_at CGTTGGTGTCTCCTGGATGCTACTA SEQ ID NO: 1368 34408_at GGGAGGCCTGAGCTTGGATTTACAC SEQ ID NO: 1369 34408_at GGAGGCCTGAGCTTGGATTTACACT SEQ ID NO: 1370 34408_at GGCCTGAGCTTGGATTTACACTGTA SEQ ID NO: 1371 34408_at CTGAGCTTGGATTTACACTGTAATA SEQ ID NO: 1372 34408_at CTTGGATTTACACTGTAATAAAGAC SEQ ID NO: 1373

TABLE 19 CE-HSC/LSC signature genes Entrez Representative Probe Set ID Gene Symbol Gene Title Gene ID Public ID 200672_x_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 NM_003128 201917_s_at SLC25A36 solute carrier family 25, member 36 55186 AI694452 201952_at ALCAM activated leukocyte cell adhesion molecule 214 AA156721 202932_at YES1 v-yes-1 Yamaguchi sarcoma viral oncogene homolog 1 7525 NM_005433 203139_at DAPK1 death-associated protein kinase 1 1612 NM_004938 203372_s_at SOCS2 suppressor of cytokine signaling 2 8835 AB004903 203875_at SMARCA1 SWI/SNF related, matrix associated, actin dependent 6594 NM_003069 regulator of chromatin, subfamily a, member 1 204069_at MEIS1 Meis homeobox 1 4211 NM_002398 204753_s_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 AI810712 204754_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 W60800 204755_x_at HLF hepatic leukemia factor 3131 M95585 205376_at INPP4B inositol polyphosphate-4-phosphatase, type II, 105 kDa 8821 NM_003866 205453_at HOXB2 homeobox B2 3212 NM_002145 205984_at CRHBP corticotropin releasing hormone binding protein 1393 NM_001882 206099_at PRKCH protein kinase C, eta 5583 NM_006255 206310_at SPINK2 serine peptidase inhibitor, Kazal type 2 (acrosin-trypsin 6691 NM_021114 inhibitor) 206478_at KIAA0125 KIAA0125 9834 NM_014792 206674_at FLT3 fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 2322 NM_004119 206683_at ZNF165 zinc finger protein 165 7718 NM_003447 209487_at RBPMS RNA binding protein with multiple splicing 11030 D84109 209676_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein-associated 7035 J03225 coagulation inhibitor) 209728_at HLA-DRB4 major histocompatibility complex, class II, DR beta 4 3126 BC005312 209993_at ABCB1 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 1 5243 AF016535 209994_s_at ABCB1 /// ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 1 /// 5243 /// AF016535 ABCB4 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 4 5244 210664_s_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein-associated 7035 AF021834 coagulation inhibitor) 210665_at TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein-associated 7035 AF021834 coagulation inhibitor) 212071_s_at SPTBN1 spectrin, beta, non-erythrocytic 1 6711 BE968833 212750_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 16B 26051 AB020630 213056_at FRMD4B FERM domain containing 4B 23150 AU145019 213094_at GPR126 G protein-coupled receptor 126 57211 AL033377 213541_s_at ERG v-ets erythroblastosis virus E26 oncogene homolog (avian) 2078 AI351043 213714_at CACNB2 calcium channel, voltage-dependent, beta 2 subunit 783 AI040163 213844_at HOXA5 homeobox A5 3202 NM_019102 215388_s_at CFH /// complement factor H /// complement factor H-related 1 3075 /// X56210 CFHR1 3078 217975_at WBP5 WW domain binding protein 5 51186 NM_016303 218627_at DRAM1 DNA-damage regulated autophagy modulator 1 55332 NM_018370 218764_at PRKCH protein kinase C, eta 5583 NM_024064 218772_x_at TMEM38B transmembrane protein 38B 55151 NM_018112 218899_s_at BAALC brain and acute leukemia, cytoplasmic 79870 NM_024812 218901_at PLSCR4 phospholipid scramblase 4 57088 NM_020353 218966_at MYO5C myosin VC 55930 NM_018728 219497_s_at BCL11A B-cell CLL/lymphoma 11A (zinc finger protein) 53335 NM_022893 221458_at HTR1F 5-hydroxytryptamine (serotonin) receptor 1F 3355 NM_000866 221773_at ELK3 ELK3, ETS-domain protein (SRF accessory protein 2) 2004 AW575374 221942_s_at GUCY1A3 guanylate cyclase 1, soluble, alpha 3 2982 AI719730 41577_at PPP1R16B protein phosphatase 1, regulatory (inhibitor) subunit 16B 26051 AB020630 222735_at TMEM38B transmembrane protein 38B 55151 AW452608 226547_at MYST3 MYST histone acetyltransferase (monocytic leukemia) 3 7994 AI817830 228904_at HOXB3 homeobox B3 3213 AW510657 235199_at RNF125 ring finger protein 125 54941 AI969697 226420_at MECOM MDS1 and EVI1 complex locus 2122 BG261252

TABLE 20 The 19 HSC genes validated by qRT-PCR. Gene Symbol Gene Title ANK3 Ankyrin 3, node of Ranvier (ankyrin G) CRHBP corticotropin releasing hormone binding protein DUSP6 dual specificity phosphatase 6 EVI1 (or MECOM) MDS1 and EVI1 complex locus DRAM1 DNA-damage regulated autophagy modulator 1 KLF4 Kruppel-like factor 4 (gut) PROM1 Prominin 1 TFPI tissue factor pathway inhibitor (lipoprotein- associated coagulation inhibitor) ZNF165 zinc finger protein 165 ABCB1 ATP-binding cassette, sub-family B (MDR/TAP), member 1 BAALC brain and acute leukemia, cytoplasmic FLT3 Fms-related tyrosine kinase 3 FOXO1 Forkhead box O1 HLF hepatic leukemia factor HOXA5 homeobox A5 TMEM200A transmembrane protein 200A MEIS1 Meis homeobox 1 SOCS2 suppressor of cytokine signaling 2 DLK1 delta-like 1 homolog (Drosophila)

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1. A method for determining a prognosis of a subject having leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) comprising: a) obtaining a sample from a subject; b) determining a gene expression level for each gene of a set of genes selected from leukemia stem cell (LSC) signature genes listed in Tables 2, 6, and/or 12, hematopoietic stem cell (HSC) signature genes listed in Tables 4 and/or 14, and/or CE-HSC/LSC signature genes listed in Table 19, to obtain a subject expression profile of a sample obtained from the subject; and c) classifying the subject as having a good prognosis or a poor prognosis based on the subject expression profile; wherein a good prognosis predicts an increased likelihood of survival within a predetermined period after initial diagnosis and poor prognosis predicts a decreased likelihood of survival within the predetermined period after initial diagnosis.
 2. (canceled)
 3. The method of claim 1, wherein the set of genes comprises at least two genes listed in Table 2 and/or 6, the genes listed in Table 4 and/or 14 and/or the genes listed in Table 19, optionally wherein the set of genes comprises ceroid lipofuscinosis neuronal 5 (CLN5) or neurofibromin 1 (NF1). 4.-9. (canceled)
 10. The method of claim 1, wherein the subject expression profile is used to calculate a subject risk score, wherein the subject is classified as having a good prognosis if the subject risk score is low and/or below a selected threshold and as having a poor prognosis if the subject risk score is high and/or above the selected threshold.
 11. A method for monitoring a response to a treatment in a subject having leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS) comprising: a. collecting a first sample from the subject before the subject has received the treatment; b. collecting a subsequent sample from the subject after the subject has received the treatment; c. determining the gene expression levels of a set of genes selected from LSC signature genes and/or HSC signature genes in the first and the subsequent samples according to the method of claim 1, to obtain a first sample subject expression profile and a subsequent sample subject expression profile, wherein the set of genes comprises at least 2 genes; and d. calculating a first sample subject expression profile score and a subsequent sample subject expression profile score; wherein a lower subsequent sample expression profile score compared to the first sample expression profile score is indicative of a positive response, and a higher subsequent sample expression profile score compared to the first expression profile score is indicative of a negative response.
 12. The method of claim 10, wherein the subject expression profile score is calculated by: a. calculating log 2 expression value of the set of genes for the sample; b. centering the log 2 expression value of step a to a zero mean; and c. taking the sum of the log 2 expression values to give the subject risk score.
 13. (canceled)
 14. The method of claim 1, wherein the gene expression level is determined by detecting mRNA expression using one or more probes and/or one or more probe sets, optionally wherein the one or more probes and/or the one or more probe sets are selected from SEQ ID NOs:1-2533. 15.-17. (canceled)
 18. The method of claim 1, wherein the leukemia is AML, ALL, CML or CLL.
 19. The method of claim 18 wherein the AML is cytogenetically normal AML (CN-AML).
 20. (canceled)
 21. The method of claim 1, further comprising the step of providing a cancer treatment to the subject suitable with the prognosis determined.
 22. The method of claim 1, further comprising the classifying the subject as low molecular risk (LMR) or high molecular risk (HMR) according to Nucleophosmin (NPM1) and FLT3 mutated internal tandem duplication (FLT3ITD) status, wherein the subject is identified as LMR if the subject comprises a mutant NPMI gene and is FLT3IT positive, and is identified as HMR if the subject has a wildtype NPMI gene and is FLT3ITD negative. 23.-26. (canceled)
 27. The method of claim 1, wherein the gene expression level is determined using Nanostring® technology, serial analysis of gene expression (SAGE), RNA sequencing, RNase protection assays, Northern Blot, a microarray chip and/or a PCR protocol, optionally multiplex PCR.
 28. (canceled)
 29. (canceled)
 30. The method of claim 1, further comprising displaying or outputting a result of one of the steps to a user interface device, a computer readable storage medium, a monitor, or a computer that is part of a network.
 31. A method of treating a subject having leukemia or myelodysplastic syndrome (MDS), comprising determining a prognosis of the subject according to the method of claim 1, and providing a suitable treatment to the subject in need thereof according to the prognosis determined.
 32. The method of claim 31, wherein the subject is determined to have a poor prognosis, and the treatment comprises a stem cell transplant.
 33. (canceled)
 34. A composition comprising a set of nucleic acid molecules each comprising a polynucleotide probe sequence selected from SEQ ID NO:1-2533. 35.-37. (canceled)
 38. An array comprising for each gene in a set of genes, the set of genes comprising at least 2 of the genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14, one or more polynucleotide probes complementary and hybridizable to a coding sequence in the gene, for determining a prognosis according to claim
 1. 39. (canceled)
 40. The array of claim 38 wherein the one or more polynucleotide probes are selected from SEQ ID NO:1-2533.
 41. A kit for determining prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer according to the method of claim 1 comprising: a) an array of claim 38 a set of probes wherein each probe of the set hybridizes and/or is complementary to a nucleic acid sequence corresponding to a gene selected from Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14 or one or more primers or sets of primers, each primer or set of primers specific for a gene selected from Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14; b) a kit control; and c) optionally instructions for use.
 42. (canceled)
 43. (canceled)
 44. A non-transitory computer readable storage medium with an executable program stored thereon, wherein the program is for predicting outcome or prognosis in a subject having a hematological cancer, and wherein the program instructs a microprocessor to perform one or more of the steps of claim
 1. 45. A computer system for performing one or more steps of claim 1 comprising: a) a database including records comprising reference expression profiles associated with clinical outcomes, each reference profile comprising the expression levels of a set of genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, 12 and/or 14; b) a user interface capable of receiving and/or inputting a selection of gene expression levels of a set of genes, the set comprising at least 2 genes listed in Table 2, 4, 6, and/or 14 for use in comparing to the gene reference expression profiles in the database; c) an output that displays a prediction of clinical prognosis according to the expression levels of the set of genes.
 46. (canceled) 